The Disciples of Sri Ramakrishna P/2 Swami Chidananda Ramakrishna Math and Mission

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The Disciples of Sri Ramakrishna 2


CONTENTS Part 2 CHAPTER SWAMI SHIVANANDA

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SWAMI RAMAKRISHNANANDA

22

SWAMI ABHEDANANDA

41

SWAMI ADBHUTANANDA

56

SWAMI ADVAITANANDA

76

SWAMI TURIYANANDA

81

SWAMI TRIGUNATITANANDA

101

SWAMI AKHANDANANDA

119

SWAMI SUBODHANANDA

132

SWAMI VIJNANANANDA

145


The Disciples of Sri Ramakrishna SWAMI SHIVANANDA

Swami Shivananda, more popularly known as Mahapurush Maharaj, was personality of great force, rich in distinctive color and individual quality. His leonine statue and dauntless vigor, his stolid indifference to praise or blame, his spontaneous mood and his profound serenity in times of storm and stress, invested with a singular appropriateness his monastic name which recalls the classical attributes of the great God Shiva. He was born sometime in the fifties of the nineteenth century on the eleventh day of the dark fortnight in the Indian month of Agrahayan (November-December). The exact year of his birth is obscure. (It is inferred that he was born on 16 November 1854) The Swami himself with his characteristic indifference to such matter never remembered it. His father had indeed prepared an elaborate horoscope for his son, but the latter threw it away into the Ganga when he chose the life of renunciation. His early name, before he took orders, was Taraknath Ghosal. He came of a respectable and influential family of Barasat. One of his ancestors,


Harakrishna Ghosal, was a Dewan of the Krishnanagar Raj. His father, Ramkanai Ghosal, was not only a successful lawyer with a substantial income but a noted Tantrika as well. Much of his earnings were spent in removing the wants of holy men and of poor helpless students. It was not unusual for him to provide board and lodging for twenty-five to thirty students at a time in his house. Later, when he became a deputy collector, his income fell, which forced him to limit his charities much against his wish. Subsequently, he rose to be the assistant Dewan of Cooch Behar. We have already referred to Ramkanai Ghosal as a great Tantrika, and it will be interesting to recall here an incident which connected him with Sri Ramakrishna. For some time, he was legal adviser to Rani Rasmani, the founder of the Kali temple of Dakshineshwar, where he came to be acquainted with Sri Ramakrishna during a visit on business matters. Sri Ramakrishna’s personality greatly attracted him, and whenever the latter came to Dakshineswar, he never missed seeing him. At one time, during intense spiritual practices, Sri Ramakrishna suffered from an acute burning sensation all over his body, which medicines failed to cure. One day he asked Ramkanai Ghosal if the latter could suggest a remedy. The latter recommended the wearing of his Ishtakavacha (an amulet containing the name of the Chosen Deity) on his arm. This instantly relieved him. From his early boyhood Tarak showed unmistakable signs of what the future was to unfold. There was something in him which marked him out from his associates. It was not mere bold conduct and straightforward manners. Though a talented boy he showed very little interest in his studies. A vague longing gnawed at his heart and made him forget himself from time to time and be lost in flights of reverie. Early in life, he became drawn to meditative practices. As days passed, his mind gravitated more and more towards the vast inner world of spirit. Often in the midst of play and laughter and boyish merriment he would suddenly be seized by an austere and grave mood which filled his companions with awe and wonder. It is not surprising that his studies did not extend beyond school.


Tarak, like scores of other young men, was drawn to the Brahmo Samaj, thanks to the influence of Keshab Chandra Sen. And though he continued his visits to the Samaj for some time, his hunger was hardly satisfied with what he got there. Meanwhile his father’s earning fell and Tarak had to work for a job. He went to Delhi. There he used to spend hours in discussing religious subjects in the house of a friend named Prasanna. One day he asked the latter about samadhi, to which Prasanna replied that samadhi was a very rare phenomenon which very few experienced, but that he knew at least one person who had certainly experience it, and mentioned the name of Sri Ramakrishna. At least Tarak heard about one who could teach him what he wanted to know. He waited patiently for the day when he would be able to meet Sri Ramakrishna. Not long after, Tarak returned to Calcutta and accepted a job in the firm of Messrs Mackinnon, Mackenzie, and Co. He was still continuing his visit to the Brahmo Samaj. About this time, however, he came to hear a good deal about Sri Ramakrishna from a relative of Ramchandra Datta, a householder devotee of Sri Ramakrishna. The more his heart yearned for deeper things the less platitudes and cheap sentiments satisfy him. He had not to wait much longer before he met the person who was to satisfy the profound needs of his soul. One day in 1880, he came to know that Sri Ramakrishna would come to Ramachandra Datta’s house in Calcutta on a visit. He decided to seize the opportunity of meeting him on the occasion. When the long-desired evening came he went to Ram Babu’s house where he found Sri Ramakrishna talking in a semi-conscious state to an audience in a crowded room. Tarak hung on his words. He had long been eager to hear about samadhi, and what was his surprise when he found from the few words, he caught that the Master had been talking on the very subject that day. He was beside himself with joy. He left the room quietly sometime after. It had made a profound impression upon him. Tarak began to feel an irresistible attraction for Sri Ramakrishna and resolved to meet him the next Saturday at Dakshineswar.


At that time Tarak did not know much about Dakshineswar. He, however, managed to reach the place in the company of a friend. The evening service was about to begin when he arrived. Tarak entered the paved courtyard and began to look for Sri Ramakrishna. Coming to his room he found him seated there. Tarak was overpowered with a deep feeling as soon as he saw him. He felt as if it was his own mother who was sitting yonder in front of him. After the usual preliminary inquiries, the Master asked he had seen him the previous Saturday in the house of Ramchandra. Tarak replied in the affirmative. ‘In what do you believe’, asked the Master, ‘in God with form or without form?’ ‘In God without form’, replied Tarak. ‘You can’t but admit the Divine Shakti also’, said the Master. Soon he proceeded towards the Kali temple and asked the young man to follow him. The evening service was going on with the accompaniment of delightful music. Coming to the temple the Master prostrated himself before the image of the Mother. Tarak at first hesitated to follow the example, because, according to the ideas of the Brahmo Samaj which he frequented, the image was no more than inert stone. But suddenly the thought flashed in his mind: ‘Why should I have such petty ideas? I hear God is omnipresent, he dwells everywhere. Then He must be present in the stone image as well.’ No sooner had the idea flashed in his mind than he prostrated himself before the image. The Master’s practiced eye judged at sight the newcomer’s mettle. He repeatedly asked him to stay overnight. ‘Stay here tonight,’ he said, ‘you can’t gain any lasting advantage by the chance visit of a day. You must come here often.’ Tarak begged to be excused as he had already decided to stay with his friend. When he came again, the Master asked him for some ice. Not knowing how to get it, Tarak spoke of it a friend who was acquainted with Surendra, a householder devotee of the Master, and the latter procured some and send it to the Master. From that time on, Tarak began to visit Dakshineswar frequently. His intimacy with the Master deepened. One day the Master asked Tarak, ‘Look here, I don’t ordinarily inquire the whereabouts of anyone who


comes here. I only look into his heart and read his feelings. But the very sight of you has made me realize that you belong to this place, and I feel a desire to know something about your father and people at home.’ He was agreeably surprised to learn that Ramkanai Ghosal was his father, and telling of the service the latter had done him, wished that he might see him again. Sometime later Ramkanai Ghosal went to Dakshinewar and prostrated himself before Sri Ramakrishna, who placed his foot on his head and entered into samadhi. Ramkanai eagerly grasped the Master’s feet and burst into tears. One day - it was probably Tarak’s third or fourth visit to Dakshieswar – the Master took him aside and asked him to put out his tongue. Then he wrote something on it. It had a strange effect upon Tarak. He felt an overpowering feeling take hold of him. The vast world of sense melted before his eyes, his mind was drawn deep within, and his whole being became absorbed in a trance. This happened twice again, once in the presence of Swami Brahmananda. Association with the Master sharpened Tarak’s hunger for religious experiences. Long afterwards he described the state of his mind at that period in the following words: ‘I often felt inclined to cry in the presence of the Master. One night, I wept profusely in front of the Kali temple. The Master was anxious at my absence and when I went to him, he said, ‘God favors those who weep for Him. Tears thus shed wash away the sins of former births.’ Another day I was meditating at the Panchavati when the Master came near. No sooner had he cast his glance at me than I burst into tears. He stood still without uttering a word. A sort of creeping sensation passed through me, and I began to tremble all over. The Master congratulated me on attaining this state and said it was the outcome of divine emotion. He then took me to his room and gave me something to eat. He could arouse the latent spiritual powers of a devotee at a mere glance.’ From the very first meeting with Sri Ramakrishna, Tarak felt in his inmost heart that he had at last found one who could guide his steps to


the doors of the Infinite, Intuitively, he felt that the vague aspirations of his boyhood and youth were realize in the personality of the Master, who appeared to him to be the consummation of all religions. To know him was to know God. With the growth of this conviction his devotion of the Master increased a hundredfold. The Master also made him his own by his immeasurable love. Tarak felt that parental love was as nothing in comparison. In a letter to an inquirer towards the end of his life he wrote about the Master, ‘I have not yet come to a final understanding whether he was a man or superman, a god or God Himself. But I have known him to be a man of complete self-effacement, master of the highest renunciation, possessed of supreme wisdom, and the very incarnation of love; and, as with the passing of days I am getting better and better acquainted with the domain of spirituality and feeling the infinite extent and depth of Sri Ramakrishna’s spiritual moods, the conviction is growing in me that to compare him with God, as God is popularly understood, would be minimizing and lowering his supreme greatness. I have seen him showering his love equally on men and women, on the learned and the ignorant, and on saints and sinners, and evincing earnest and unceasing solicitude for the relief of their misery and for their attainment of infinite peace by realizing the Divine. And I dare say that the world has not seen another man of his type in modern times so devoted to the welfare of mankind.’ While Tarak was still in service, his father was forced through poverty to agree to giving Tarak’s sister Nirada in marriage to a family from which he would accept a girl as Tarak’s bride. Much as Tarak disliked the idea, he was compelled to marry for the sake of his sister. He had resolved not to live a worldly life; but before he actually renounced the world, he opened his heart fully to the Master, who said, ‘Why should you be afraid? For I am there to help you. You have of course to look after your wife so long as she lives. Have a little patience, and the Mother will settle everything.’ Tarak followed the Master’s advice; he earned for his wife, but avoided all other relationship with her. That he was successful


in this endeavor is evident from a letter which he wrote in his old age to Romain Rolland. There Swami Shivananda declares that he led an absolutely pure life of unbroken celibacy. Tragic as the event was, Tarak’s wife did not live long after his meeting with the Master. Tarak’s purity and prayer, Sri Ramakrishna’s advice and encouragement and the grace of all-merciful Providence did not allow him to fall a victim to the snares of the world. The perfect purity of his married life earned for him the popular name of Mahapurush from the great Swami Vivekananda. His wife’s death removed the only obstacle in the path of his renouncing the world. With this end in view Tarak went to his father to bid him farewell. At this proposal, the father became deeply moved and tears began to stream down his face. He asked Tarak to go to the family shrine and to make prostration there. Then the father, placing his hand on his son’s head blessed him saying, ‘May you realize God. I have tried very hard myself. I even thought of renouncing the world, but that was not to be. I bless you, therefore, that you may find God.’ Tarak related all this to the Master who was much pleased and expressed his hearty approval. With the Master’s consent, the monk Tarak now lived sometimes in an outer room of Ramchandra Datta’s house and sometimes at the Kankurgachhi Yogodyan, begging for his food and cooking it himself. Tarak continued his visits to Dakshineswar till the Master fell seriously ill in 1885, which necessitated his removal first to Calcutta and then to the Cossipore garden house. All these years the Master had been quietly shaping the character of his disciple, instructing them not in religious matters, but also in the everyday duties of life, Cossipore, however, formed the most decisive period in their lives. Here Tarak joined the group of young brother disciples- Narendra, Rakhal, Baburam, Yogin, Niranjan, Sharat, Shashi, Latu, Kali, Gopal (senior) and Gopal (junior) to serve and attend on the Master during his illness, Service to the Master and loyalty to common ideals forged an indissoluble bond of unity among these young aspirants. Much of their time was devoted to discussion on religious subjects. All this set ablaze


the great fire of renunciation smoldering in them, and they yearned for realization. One incident during this period is worth recounting. Narendra, Tarak, and Kali were at this time very much engaged in the thought of Buddha and Brahman without any quality. Impelled by this they went for tapasya to Bodh Gaya. As they sat in meditation under the Bodhi tree, lost to outer consciousness, Narendra suddenly began to weep and then held Tarak in a warm embrace. According to one version, Narendranath, deep in the thought of Buddha’s compassion, was seized with such an emotional upsurge that he could not help embracing his brother out of overflowing love. Or perhaps, Narendra saw something of Buddha in Tarak. At least Kali affirmed that he heard from Narendra that the latter saw a light flash out of Buddha’s image and proceed towards Tarak. The Master too seems to have had a similar estimation of Tarak’s core of personality. About this estimation, we have it on the evidence of Swami Turiyananda that one day when Tarak was returning from the Kali temple, the Master remarked, ‘His “home” is that high Power from which proceed name and form.’ Tarak had something of the Transcendental Verity in him. And Buddha, it must be remembered, was not an atheist, but an embodiment of the Upanishadic ideal. After the passing away of the Master, the small group of disciples clustered round the monastery of Baranagore. The first to come was Tarak, with whom soon joined Gopalda, Kali, and others. The Master’s death had created a great void in the hearts of the disciples, who began to spend most of their time in intense mediation in order to feel the living presence of the Master. Often, they would leave the monastery and wander from place to place, away from crowded localities and familiar faces. This period of their lives, which stretched over a number of years and which was packed with severe austerities and great miracles of faith, out of the mighty fire of which was forged the powerful characters the world later saw. Is mostly a sealed book. Towards the end of his life, Swami Shivananda, the name received by Tarak when he became a monk,


one day chanced to lift a corner of the pall of mystery which lay over these stormy years. ‘Often it happened’, he said, ‘that I had one piece of cloth to cover myself with. I used to wear half of it and wrap the other half round the upper part of my body. In those days of wandering, I would often bathe in the water of wells, and then I used to wear a piece of loincloth and let my only piece of cloth dry. Many a night I slept under trees. At that time the spirit of renunciation was aflame and the idea of bodily comfort never entered the mind. Though I travelled mostly without means, thanks to the grace of the Lord, I never fell into danger. The Master’s living presence use to protect me always. Often, I did not know where the next meal would come from. … At that period a deep dissatisfaction gnawed within, and the heart yearned for God. The company of men repelled me. I used to avoid roads generally used. At the approach of night, I would find some suitable place just to lay my head on the pass the night alone with my thoughts.’ Some indication of Tarak’s bent of mind at this period can be had from a few reminiscences which have come down to us. He had a natural slant towards the orthodox and austere path of knowledge which placed little value on popular religious attitudes. He avoided ceremonious observances and disregarded emotion approaches to religion. He keyed up his mind to the formless aspect of the Divine. This stern devotion to jnana continued for some time. Deep down in his heart, however, lay his boundless love for the Master which nothing could affect for a moment. In later years, with the broadening experience, his heart opened to the infinite beauties of spiritual emotion. During his days of itineracy Swami Shivananda, known as Mahapurushji Popularly among his disciples, visited various places in North India. In the course of these travels, he also went to Almora where he became acquainted with a rich man of the place named Lala Badrilal Shah, who soon became a great admirer of the disciples of Sri Ramakrishna and took great care of them whenever he happened to meet them. Here, towards the later part of 1893, the year of Swamiji’s journey to the West, Tarak met


Mr. E T sturdy, and Englishman interested in Theosophy. Mahapurushji’s personality and talks greatly attracted him. Mr. Sturdy came to hear of Swamiji’s activities in the West from him, and on his return to England he invited Swamiji there and made arrangements for preaching of Vedanta in England. With the return of Swamiji from the West in 1897, Mahapurushji’s days of itineracy came to an end. He went to Madura to receive Swamiji, and returned with him in Calcutta. In the same year, at the request of Swamiji, he went to Ceylon and preached Vedanta for about eight months. There he used to hold classes on the Gita, and the Raja Yoga, which became popular with the local educated community including number of Europeans. One of his students, Mrs. Picket, to whom he gave the name Haripriya, was specially trained by him so as to qualify her to teach Vedanta to the Europeans. She later went to Australia and New Zealand at the direction of the Swami and succeeded in attracting interested students in both the countries. He returned to the Math in 1898, which was then housed at Nilambar Babu’s garden. In 1899 plague broke out in an epidemic form in Calcutta. Swami Vivekananda asked Swami Shivananda and others to organize relief work for the sick. The latter put forth his best efforts without the least thought for his personal safety. About this time a landslide did considerable damage to property at Darjeeling, and Mahapurushji also collected some money for helping those who were affected by it. The natural drive of his mind was, however, for a life of contemplation, and so he went again to the Himalayas to taste once more the delight and peace of meditation. Here he spent some years, although he would occasionally come down to the Math for a visit. About this time Swamiji asked him to found a monastery in the Himalayas. Although this desire could not be realized at the time, Swami Shivananda remembered his wish and years afterwards, in 1915, he laid the beginnings of a monastery at Almora, which was completed by Swami Turiyananda with his cooperation.


In 1900 he accompanied Swami Vivekananda on the latter’s visit to Mayavati. While returning to the plains Swamiji left him at Pilibhit with a request that he should collect funds for the maintenance and improvement of the Belur Math. He stayed back and raised some money. Shortly before Swamiji passed away, the Raja of Bhinga gave him Rs 500 for preaching Vedanta. Swamiji handed the money over to Swami Shivananda asking him to start on Ashrama with it at Varanasi, which he did in 1902. The seven long years which he spends at this Varanasi Ashrama formed a memorable chapter of his life. Outwardly, of course, there was no spectacular achievement. The Ashrama grew up, not so much as a center of great social activity, but as a school of hard discipline and rigorous for the development of individual character as in the hermitages of old. Here we are confronted with an almost insurmountable obstacle in the way of presenting the life-story of spiritual geniuses. The most active period of their lives is devoid of events in popular estimation. It is hidden away from the public eye and spent in producing those invisible and intangible commodities whose value cannot be measured in terms of material goods. When they appear again, they were centers of great and silent forces which often leave their imprint on centuries. Realization of God is not an event in the sense in which the discovery of a star or an element is an event, which resounds through all the continents. But one who has solved the riddle of life is a far greater benefactor of humanity than, say, the discoverer of high scientific truths. Anxious times were ahead for Swami Shivananda; the funds of the Varanasi Ashrama were soon depleted. At times nobody knew wherefrom the expenses of the day would come. Mahapurushji, however, carried on unruffled and the clouds lifted after a while. Most of his time was spent in intense spiritual practices. He would scarcely stir out of the Ashrama, and day and night he would be in high spiritual mood. The life in the Ashrama was one of severe discipline and hardship. The inmates of a sea, he felt as though something emerged out of his body, spread all over the


landscape, and became identified with all that existed. Did he realize God there in His cosmic form (Virat)? After 1930 his health broke down greatly, though he could still take short walks. What a cataract of disasters had come upon him since 1927 - loss of the comrades of old days one after another, trouble and defections, illness and physical disabilities! But nothing could for a moment dim the brightness of his burning flame of reliance on God. They only brought into high relief the greatness of his spiritual qualities. At night, after meals, he would usually pass an hour or so all alone, except for the presence of an attendant or two who used to be nearby. And whenever he was alone, he seemed to be immersed in a profound spiritual mood. He would occasionally break the silence by gently uttering the Master’s name. The mood would recur whenever in the midst of an almost uninterrupted flow of visitors and devotees he found a little time of himself. In the midst of terrible physical suffering, he would radiate joy and peace all round. Not once did anyone hear him utter a syllable of complaint against the torments which assailed the flesh. To all inquiries about his health his favorite reply was, ‘Janaki (Sita) is all right so long she is able to take the name of Rama.’ Physicians who came to treat him were amazed at his buoyant spirit which nothing could depress. Sometimes he would point to his pet dog and say, ‘That fellow’s master is here (pointing to himself)’, and then pointing one finger to himself and another to the Master’s shrine he would add, ‘and this fellow is His dog.’ Age, which diminishes our physical and mental vigor, serves only to heighten the force and charm of a spiritual personality. The last years of Swami Shivananda’s life were days of the real majesty of a spiritual sovereign. The assumption of the vast spiritual responsibility of the great office tore off the austere mask of reserve and rugged taciturnity which so long hid his tender heart and broad sympathy. All these years thousands upon thousands came to him, men and women, young and old, rich and poor, high and low, the homeless and the outcast, men battered by fate and reeling under the thousand and one miseries of which man is prey,


and went back lifted up in spirits. A kind look, a cheering word, and an impalpable something which was nevertheless most real, put new hope and energy into persons whose lives had almost been blasted away by frustrations and despair. He cheerfully bore all discomfort and hardship in the service of the helpless and the needy. Even during the last illness which deprived him of the power of speech and half of his limbs, the same anxiety to be of help to all was plain, and his kindly look and the gentle movement of his left hand in blessing, and, above all, his holy presence did more to brace up their drooping spirits than countless words contained it books could ever do. During his term of office, the work of the Mission steadily expanded. The ideas of the Master spread to new lands, and centers were opened not only in different parts of India, but also in various foreign countries. He was, however, no sectarian with limited sympathy. All kinds of work, social, national, or religious, received his blessings. Laborer in different fields came to him and went away heartened by words of cheer and sympathy. His love was too broad to be limited by sectional interests; it extended to every place and to every movement where good was being done. Are not all who toil for freedom and justice, for moral and religious values, for the removal of human want and suffering, for raising the material and cultural level of the masses, doing the Master’s works? He was no mere recluse living away from human interests and aspirations, away from the currents of everyday life. His was an essentially modern mind keenly aware of the suffering of the poor and the downtrodden. His clear reason unaffected by sectional interests could grasp the truth behind all movements for making the lot of the common man happy and cheerful. When the Madras Council was considering the Religious Endowment Bill which aimed at a better management of the finance of the religious Maths, the abbot of a Math in Madras approached him seeking his help for fighting the measure because it touched the vested interests. But the Swami told him point-blank that a monastery should not simply hoard money, but should see that it comes to the use of society. When news of


flood and famine reached him, he became anxious for the helpless victims and would not rest till relief had been organized. One day he was invited for meal at a devotee’s house in Madras. When resting after food he was roused by some noise downstairs, and looking through the window he found some poor people gathering together the food in the leaves thrown down after the guests had been satisfied. Being much moved by the sight, the Swami asked the devotee to feed them properly, and he remarked, ‘India has no hope till she atones for this accumulated sin.’ Mahapurushji naturally avoided politics. But he was full of admiration for the spirit of renunciation and service that inspired some of the outstanding patriots. About Mahatma Gandhi, for instance, he said, ‘The patriotism of Swamiji has taken possession of Gandhiji. All should imitate Gandhi’s character. There will some hope of peace only when such people are born in every country.’ Full of praise though he was of the heroic efforts of the Mahatma and his followers, Mahapurushji never for a moment deviated from the path of spirituality chalked out by Swamiji. Thus when in the heyday of Mahatmaji’s non-cooperation movement, some Bengali leaders felt that the Ramakrishna Mission should take an active part in politics, that being according to them the inner core of Swamiji’s teachings, and when, under such an impression, some people warned Mahaurushji that the Mission was inviting disaster by thus standing aloof from the national movement, Mahapurushji calmly told them that the path of national salvation lay through the formation of character on a spiritual basis. That was the real message of Swamiji. Other might follow the path they considered best, but the Mission could not give up its ideals for gaining any temporary advantage. In fact, he spoke as a true son of the Master was expected to speak. Though all kinds of good work found him sympathetic, he never failed to stress the spirit which should be at the back of all activities. One who witnesses the drama of life from the summit of realization views its acts in a light denied to common understanding. Our toils and strivings, out


joys and delights, our woes and tears are seen in their true proportion from the vast perspective of the Eternal. Work yoked to true understanding is a means for the unfoldment of the divine within man. So, his advice was always: Behind work there should be meditation; without meditation, work cannot be performed in a way which is conducive to spiritual growth. Nor is work nicely performed without having a spiritual background. He would say, ‘Fill your mind in the morning so much with the thoughts of God that one point of the compass of your mind will always to towards God though you are engaged in various distracting activities.’ His own life was a commentary on what he preached. Though he soared on the heights of spiritual wisdom he was to the last rigid in attending to the customary devotions for which he had scarcely any need for himself. Until the time he was too weak to go out of his room, every dawn found him in the shrine room meditating at a fixed hour. In the evening, perhaps, he would be talking to a group of people when the bell for evening service rang. He would at once become silent and lost in deep contemplation, while those who sat around him found their minds stilled and they enjoyed a state of tranquility which comes only from deep meditation. Not only did his life stand out as the fulfilment of the ideal aspirations of the devotee, as an ever-present source of inspiration, but his kindness and pity issued forth in a thousand channels to the afflicted and the destitute. Not all who came to him were in urgent need of spiritual comfort. Empty stomachs and naked bodies made them far more conscious of their physical wants than of the higher needs of the soul. His charities flowed in a steady stream to scores of persons groaning under poverty. Perhaps there came to him one whose daughter had fallen seriously ill, but who did not know how to provide the expenses of her treatment. There was another who had lost his job and stared helplessly at the future. Such petitions and their fulfilment were an almost regular occurrence during his last


years, not to mention his constant gifts of cloths and blankets, and so on, to hundreds of people. His love for the Master, his monastery, and his devotees knew no bounds. His doors remained ever open to the monks and devotees, and so long as it was physically possible for him, he moved about the monastery grounds looking after everything and inquiring about everybody. The cowshed, the kitchen, the dispensary, in fact everything belonging to the Master got his fullest attention. His special care was of course for the shrine room. Every day he inquired about the offerings to be made to Sri Ramakrishna. When any devotee brought fruits or flowers for himself, he insisted on those being first offered to the Master. The first duty for anyone entering the monastery was to offer his salutation at the shrine. In the days of his physical decline, the grand old man, whom illness had confined to bed, was like a great patriarch, a paterfamilias, affectionately watching over the welfare of his vast brood. His love showed itself in a hundred ways. If anyone of his numerous devotees or members of the monastery fell sick, he never failed to make anxious inquiries about him. If any of the devotees did not turn up on the usual days at the Math, it never failed to attract his notice. And when the devotees came to the Math, even their petty needs and comforts engaged his attention. But very few of them came to know of this. His numerous children, who felt secure in his affectionate care, went about their duties full of the delight of living. One night, after the meal, some of the members of the monastery at Belur were making fun and laughing loudly in the inner verandah of the ground floor of the main Math building. The noise of laughter rose up and could be heard in Mahapurushji’s room. He smiled a little at this and said softly: ‘The boys are laughing much and seem to be happy. They have left their hearth and home in search of bliss. Master! Make them blissful.’ What an amount of feeling lay behind these few tender words of prayer! The real is that which is an object of experience. To Swami Shivananda God and religion were not vague words or distant ideals, but living


realities. Lives like his light up the dark recesses of history and point to the divine goal towards which humanity is travelling with growing knowledge. TEACHINGS OF SWAMI SHIVANANDA

It is only by doing selfless work that the mind gets purified. And when the mind is purified, even the slightest suggestion would fill your heart with devotion for the Lord. If the mind be not purified, you may practice japa to any extent, nothing will result by way of spiritual progress. What can japa do if the mind is full of selfishness, jealousy, hatred, and so on? It is because the country is engrossed in Tamas (inertia) that Swamiji has prescribed work as a means to raise it up. You talk of patriotism. What else can be greater patriotism then this love for the poor and being of service to them? If one practices meditation and japa regularly along with work, then there will be no trouble. We have to work, that is certain. But then if one does not practice meditation, japa, along with work, then one will not be able to work in the right spirit. The whole trouble is about ‘me and mine’ which always seeks comfort. Mediation and japa are absolutely necessary - there should be no lapse in them. When you meditate, think that you and He alone exist, and forget everything else - work, (monastic) Order, Math, and so on. Gradually you have to forget even your own existence. If work makes the mind impure, it is not good work, but an evil one. The right kind of service is possible only when one sees God in the person served. But it is difficult to have this knowledge at the outset. So, to start with, one has to depend on the word of one’s guru, and take them on faith. We must faith in Swamiji, who has propounded this doctrine of service. The Master’s life is the aphorism, as it were, and Swamiji’s is the commentary on it. Swamiji formulated this doctrine of service, seeing God in everything, from several incidents in the Master’s life. One has to meditate on the different centers in the Sushumna (the nerve current flowing through the spinal column). In the heart one has to


meditate on one’s Chosen Deity as sitting on a red lotus with twelve petals, and in the head on the guru as seated on a white lotus with a thousand petals. These meditations help japa, and therefore, should be practiced. You cannot realize God through tapasya, sacrifice, charity, or study of the scriptures. He alone realizes Him on whom descends His grace. But when you have, on the other hand, the words of the Upanishad: ‘The Atman cannot be realized by the weak.’ One who is weak and effortless cannot realize Him. The Gita lays stress on personal effort. ‘The self must be raised by the self, so let no one weaken this self for this self is the friend of oneself and this self is the enemy of oneself.’ One has to liberate oneself from bondage, one should never be despondent. Here ‘self’ means mind, intellect, and so on. Don’t yield to despondency. It makes the mind restless. Always think that you are all blessed, that you are the children of the Lord. If evil thoughts come to your mind, don’t pay any heed to them. There are impressions of past lives in the mind and now and then they come to the conscious plane. Have strength. There is no fear. You will get everything in time. Low thoughts will come and go. Don’t mind them. Through His grace, as a result of constant practice, you will get strength. Devote your whole mind to japa, meditation, worship, and study of the scriptures, whichever appeals to you for the time being. The Lord will set everything right. Sri Ramakrishna never liked one-sidedness. He was always for manysidedness. Mere mechanical japa does not help much. You must have love for the Lord. But then, even mechanical japa has some results, for after all, it is the Lord’s name that is being repeated. But the main thing is love for the Lord with the idea that He is our father, mother, friend, master, everything. You must have some such relationship. The one thing necessary is His grace. Without the Lord’s grace no spiritual practice is possible. No one works independently. Everyone


works as directed by Him. He is the mechanic and rest are machines. But it is very hard to remember all this. If one has this idea, then one gets beyond all good and evil. If the Mother is gracious, then everything is possible - dispassion, spiritual practice, and the like. The Lord has two powers - Vidya Shakti (knowledge) and Avidya Shakti (ignorance). If He removes from us the influence of the latter and helps with the former, everything goes on well. So, pray, ‘Mother, be gracious unto me.’ If Her grace is there, nothing is impossible. Guru and Ishta (chosen Ideal or Deity) are one. But then so long as you are in the relative world, bounded by name and form, you have to accept them as separate. When knowledge comes, you will find that the two are one. Pray to the Lord for strength, knowledge, and dispassion. Pray to Him with all your heart for His grace, devotion, and faith. It is not possible for everyone to practice hard austerities, but then, through prayer everything is attained. If you find it difficult to meditate, be prayerful. It is difficult to meditate on the formless. The Vedas prescribe Akasha as symbol of the formless God. Other symbols like the ocean may also be taken but Akasha is better. He resides in the heart of man as consciousness. But then one has to start with some form. There is no question of inferiority or superiority in this - it is a question of temperament. Whatever appeals to one is the best for him. Form melts into the formless, and again the formless takes a form. God is both with form and without form, and again beyond both. It is not possible to comprehend Him with this mind. He can be comprehended only with the pure mind. The Master used to say, ‘The pure mind and Self are one.’ That mind in which there are no mentation or desires cannot be called mind. Then there exists only an all-pervading consciousness, power, or Brahman - whatever you may call it.


SWAMI RAMAKRISHNANANDA

Even while Swamiji (Swami Vivekananda) was in the midst of his arduous labors in the West, he realized that more important work was awaiting him in India. When the great leader returned to the motherland and made his triumphal tour from Colombo to Almora, it was in the city of Madras that he first intimated to eager listeners his plan of campaign. Some of the citizens approached Swamiji with the request that he should kindly send one of his brother disciples to stay in Madras and establish a monastery which would become the center of the religious teachings and philanthropic activities outlined by Swamiji in his addresses delivered in India and abroad. By the way of reply he said, ‘I shall send you one who is more orthodox than your most men of the South and who is at the same time unique and unsurpassed in his worship of and meditation on God.’ The very next steamer from Calcutta brought to Madras Swami Ramakrishnananda. In a few words the leader had summarized the individual characteristics of the apostle in relation to the field of work for which he was chosen. South India has all along been the stronghold of orthodox Hinduism. In order to infuse new life into the ancient religion without breaking the


continuity of the tradition, the apostle to the South had to be a person of great intellectual attainments, of unflinching devotion to the ideals, and of deep reverence for the forms of worship and religious practices sanctified by the authority of a succession of great teachers. Swami Ramakrishnananda or Shashi Maharaj, as he was familiarly called, possessed all these and, in addition, he had an overflowing kindness, abounding sympathy for all, and a childlike nature which exhibited the inner purity of the soul. Shashi Bhushan Chakravarti - that was the name by which Swami Ramakrishnananda was known in his pre-monastic days - was born in an orthodox brahmin family of the Hooghly district, Bengal, on 13 July 1863. His father Ishwarchandra Chakravarti, a strict observer of religious traditions and a devout worshipper of the Divine Mother, gave the early training that laid the foundation of the lofty character exhibited in the life of his great son. Shashi went to school, and having successfully completed the school course, entered the Metropolitan College in Calcutta. He was a brilliant student at college and his favorite subjects were literature (both English and Sanskrit), mathematics, and philosophy. He and his cousin Sharat Chandra - afterwards Swami Saradananda - came under the influence of the Brahmo Samaj. Shashi became intimately known to the Brahmo leader, Keshab Chandra Sen, and appointed private tutor to his sons. On certain day in October, 1883, Shashi and Sharat, along with a few other boy-companions, arrived at Dakshineswar to see the Master. Sri Ramakrishna received them with a smile and began to talk to them warmly about the need of renunciation in spiritual life. Shashi was then reading in the First Arts class and the other were preparing for matriculation. As Shashi was the oldest of the band, the conversation was addressed to him. Sri Ramakrishna asked Shashi whether he believed in God with form or without form. The boy frankly answered that he was not certain about the existence of God and was not, therefore, able to speak one way or the other. The reply pleased the Master very much.


Shashi and Sharat were fascinated by the personality of Sri Ramakrishna whom they henceforth accepted as their Master, the pole-star of their lives. Of Shashi and Sharat, Sri Ramakrishna used to say that both of them were the followers of Jesus of Christ in a former incarnation. Although Shashi was a brilliant student, his interest in the college curriculum began to dwindle. Slowly and silently, he was progressing in the life of the spirit. His keen intellect, robust physique, and steady character were beginning to center round the one grand theme of Godrealization. One day at Dakshineswar it happened that he was busily engaged in studying some Persian books in order to read the Sufi poets in the original. The Master had called him thrice before he heard. When he came, Sri Ramakrishna asked him what he had been doing. Shashi said that he was absorbed in his books. He quietly remarked, ‘If you forget your duties for the sake of study, you will lose all your devotion.’ Shashi understood. He took the Persian books and threw them into the Ganga. From that time on book-learning had little importance in his scheme of life. Shashi was then in the final B A class; the examination was fast approaching. But at that very time Sri Ramakrishna was lying ill at Shyampukur in Calcutta. The young disciple had to decide between his studies and service to the person of the Master. Unhesitatingly he decided to give his body, mind and soul wholly and unreservedly to the service of the Master. He followed the Master to the Cossipore-house. Shashi was the very embodiment of service. Other disciples also gave their very best in the service of the Master. But Shashi’s case was conspicuous. He knew no rest. He did not care for any other spiritual practice. Service to the guru was the only concern of his life. Fortunately, he was endowed with a strong physique. But more than that, behind the body, there was a mind whose strength was incessantly sustained by his love and devotion to the guru. Till the last moment of the earthly existence of the Master, Shashi was unflagging in his zeal to serve him as best as he could. Before Sri Ramakrishna lay down for the final departure, he sat up for some time


against some five or six pillows which were supported by Shashi, who was at the same time fanning him. When the Master was in Mahasamadhi, the disciple could not at first realize what it was. Shashi rebuked those who thought that it was otherwise than samadhi, and along with others began to chant holy texts. But despite their earnest hope the body did not indicate any sign of life, and the doctor finally declared it to be Mahasamadhi. The greatest trial was at the burning ghat. Feelings of a contrasted character visited the soul of Shashi. Now the joy and bliss the Master had shed over them all came over him and he sang the name of the Master in triumphant praise. Then a sense of utter loneliness stole over his joy and made him the victim of most violent grief. When the flames that had made ashes of the body of the Master had died out, amidst the silence that prevailed, Shashi gathered the sacred relics. Then came the period of supreme depression. The boys who were children of the Master gathered together at the newly founded monastery at Baranagore. Shashi played no small part in holding the young band together and in regulating the routine of life to be followed by them. While others were indifferent as to whether the body lived or died in their intense search for the Highest, Shashi took care that his brother disciples had not to face actual starvation. He went so far as to serve as a schoolmaster - though for a very short period - to meet the expenses of Math. He would say to his brother, ‘You just continue your spiritual practices with undivided attention. You need not bother about anything else. I shall maintain the Math by begging.’ Swamiji, recalling these blessed days many years later, said with reference to Swami Ramakrishnananda, ‘Oh, what a steadfastness to the ideal did we ever find in Shashi! He was a mother to us. It was he who managed about our food. We used to get up at three o’clock in the morning. Then all of us, some after bathing, would go to the worship room and be lost in japa and meditation. There were times when the meditation lasted to four or five o’clock in the afternoon. Shashi would be waiting with our dinner; if


necessary, he would by sheer force drag us out of our meditation. Who cared then if the world existed or not!’ The parents of the boys came and attempted to take them back to their homes, but they would not yield. Shashi’s father came, begged and threatened, but to no purpose. The son said, ‘The world and home are to me as a place infested with tigers.’ The time came when the boys decided to renounce the world formally by taking the monastic vows. They changed their names. Shashi became Ramakrishnananda. Narendranath, the leader of the young band, wanted to have that name for himself but thought that Shashi had a better claim to it because of his unparalleled love for the Master. Indeed, Shashi’s love for the Master sounds like a story, nay, has passed into stories. Death could not rob him of the living presence of the Master. He served the Master in the relics with the same devotion and earnestness as when he had been physically alive. Others went on pilgrimages, adopting the wandering life of the monk. Swami Ramakrishnananda stuck like a sentinel on to the holy spot where the Master’s relics were temporarily enshrined. Worshipping the Master and keeping the monastery as the center to which, the wanderers would occasionally return were the duties which Swami Ramakrishnananda assigned to himself. He did not think of going to a single place of pilgrimage. What place under the sun could be more sacred to him than where the relics of the Master lay? He would personally attend to all the items of worship; he would bring water from the Ganga, gather flowers, and prepare the food to be offered. He would not take any food that was not offered to the Master. The very soul of devotion entered into Swami Ramakrishnananda. If Shashi’s devotion to the guru was beyond comparison with any earthly example, his love for Swamiji whom Sri Ramakrishna had ordained as the leader of the whole group, was wonderful. Any word from the leader was more than a command to him. There was no trouble which he would not face, no sacrifice which he would not make in deference to the slightest wish of Swami Vivekananda. This spirit was so strongly manifest in him,


that Swami Vivekananda would at times make fun with him, taking advantage of his love. Shashi, as we have seen, was very orthodox in his attitude. One day the leader asked him, ‘Shashi, I want to put your love for me to the test. Can you buy me a piece of English bread from a Mohammedan shop? Shashi at once agreed and actually did the thing. After Swamiji’s return from the West when he proposed to Shashi to go to Madras to do preaching work, Shashi at once responded to the call. It meant that he would have to give up many habits of long years, it meant that he would have to leave the place where he was so steadfastly worshipping the relics of the Master. But these were no considerations against the wish of the leader. After the Master had discouraged his book-learning, Shashi lost all interest in study. His whole heart was centered in devotion and worship. Now he was asked to preach religion and philosophy. The great heart had to become the mighty intellect. It may be that for this reason the leader directed Swami Ramakrishnananda to go to Madras. A combination of deep devotion and keen intellect is something very rare. But this very rare type was needed for the work in South India, and it was the good fortune of that province to get such an apostle. The Ramakrishna Mission work in the South now stands as a noble edifice giving shelter to thousands of persons who seek the consolation which religion alone can give. But the strong foundation for this imposing edifice was firmly laid by the great monk, the first apostle of the Ramakrishna Order to Madras. Swami Ramakrishnananda arrived at Madras in 1897. At first, he was housed in a small building near the ‘Ice House,’ from where he had to shift to some rooms in the Ice House where Swamiji had lived after his return from the West. A little later when the house was auctioned away by the owner, the Swami had to stay in an outhouse of the same building at great personal inconvenience. When the Ice House was put to auction, the devotees very much wished that possible some of their friends should purchase it, so that Swami Ramakrishnananda might not be inconvenience and his work might go on smoothly. As the auction was


proceeding, the Swami sat unconcerned in a far end of the compound on a rickety bench. A devotee was anxiously watching the bidding and now and then reporting to the Swami how it was progressing. The Swami looked up and said, ‘Why do you worry about it? What do we care who buys or sells? My wants are few. I need only a small room for Sri Guru Maharaj. I can stay anywhere and spend my time in talking of him.’ Indeed, such was the attitude of the Swami throughout his whole life, even later when he received much ovation and many honors. It was in 1907 that a permanent house (This has been replaced by a larger building) for Math was constructed on a small site in a suburb of the city. The house was a simple ones-storied building consisting of four rooms, a spacious hall, kitchen, and outhouses. The Swami was delighted when at last there was a permanent place where the Master’s worship could be carried on uninterruptedly. He said, ‘This is a fine house for Sri Ramakrishna to live in. Realizing that he occupies it, we must keep it very clean and very pure. We should take care not to disfigure the walls by driving nails or otherwise.’ The worship of the Master as done by Swami Ramakrishnananda was very striking. A spiritual aspirant longs to experience the tangible presence of god. But with Swami Ramakrishnananda it was an entirely different matter. He so vividly realized the presence of God that there was no room for any craving for that in his mind. It was only left to him to serve Him, and he did it with unwavering ardor. He would serve his Master exactly in the way he did while he was in physical body. Some article of food is preferred hot; Swami Ramakrishnananda would keep the stove burning and offer that piece by piece to the Master. He would offer to the Master a piece of twig hammered soft to be used as a toothbrush, as is the practice in some Indian homes. After the midday offerings, he would fan the Master for some time so that the latter could easily have his nap. On hot days he would suddenly wake up at night, open the shrine and fan the Master so that the latter might not be disturbed in sleep because of the sweltering heat. Sometimes he would talk sulkily with the


Master, blaming him for something. To a critical mind these things might seem queer, but he only knew what great Presence he felt. These actions were so natural and spontaneous with him that a witness would sometimes even fall into respecting him for them. Once a certain gentleman, who was then holding the highest position in government service, called at the monastery to pay his respects to Swami Ramakrishnananda. The Swami, after finishing the morning worship, was at that time fanning the portrait of the Master, which he would do for a couple of hours and more, uttering the names of the Lord - Shiva Guru, Sat Guru, Sanatana Guru, Parama Guru, and so on. During such times, the face of the Swami would be flushed red with emotion and his tall and robust figure would look more imposing. The whole sight struck the visitor with such awe and reverence that he could do nothing but prostrate before the Swami and return home. A bold student to whom the Swami gave the liberty of arguing, once freely criticized him for worshipping the portrait of a dead man as that indicated an aberration of mind. The Swami said that the image in temples were not simply dull, dead, inert matter, but were living gods who could be spoken to. There was such a ring of sincerity and genuineness of feeling behind these words that in spite of himself, the conviction stole on the critic, as he himself afterwards narrated, that what he heard could not but be true. But if Swami Ramakrishnananda’s devotion was great, his intellectual acumen was no less so. His scholarship in Sanskrit was immense. Not knowing the local dialect, he had sometimes to hold conversations with orthodox pundits in Sanskrit. He wrote the life of the great Acharya Ramanuja in Bengali, which has become an authoritative book on that saint. Not only of Hindu scriptures, but his knowledge of Christianity and of Islam also was superb. He knew the Bible from cover to cover and could expound it with a penetrating insight which would strike even orthodox Christian theologians with awe. Once on a Good Friday he gave a talk on the Crucifixion with so much depth of feeling and vividness of


description that a Western listener, with experience of sermons in churches, became amazed as to how the words of the Swami could be so living. Though to all intents and purposes he was living like an orthodox Hindu, his love for the prophets of other faiths was genuine and sometimes embarrassing to his orthodox followers. Those who have been him going to St. Thomas’ Church in Madras relate that he would go straight up to the alter and kneel before it like a Christian and pray. One evening some Mohammedan students, caught in the rain, took shelter in the monastery. The Swami warmly welcomed them and talked to them not of his own faith but of Islam. His exposition was so illuminating that those Mohammedan students repeated their visit to monastery many times afterwards. When holding scripture classes of giving religious discourse, he would not simply explain the texts or repeat the scriptural authorities. He would at times give flashes of illumination from the depth of his realizations. Because of this, his words were always penetrating. They would silence even those who came with a combative spirit. With a few words he could explain philosophical problems on which volumes had been written. He had a great knack of probing into the heart of things and of expressing the truth in pithy sayings. Once after discussions with the professor of a local college in regard to politics and religion, the Swami said, ‘Politics is - the freedom of the senses, while religion is freedom from the senses.’ With reference to dualistic and monistic systems of philosophy he once remarked, ‘In the dualistic method enjoyment is the ideal; in the monistic method freedom is the ideal. By the first the lover gets his beloved at last, and by the second the slave becomes the master. Both are sublime. One has no need to go from one ideal to the other.’ ‘Science is the struggle of man in the outer world. Religion is the struggle of man in the inner world’, he once said in the course of conversation, ‘Both struggles are great, no doubt, but one ends in success and the other ends in failure. That is the difference. Religion begins where science ends.’


He had, however, no prejudice against science. At times he would be solving mathematical problems as a pastime. Once he procured from a local college all the latest authoritative books on astronomy and began to study them assiduously. It was not difficult for him to understand them. Throughout his stay in Madras, the Swami had to work very hard and pass-through strenuous days. In the early period he had to cook his own food, do service in the shrine, and hold classes in various parts of the city. Sometimes the financial trouble was appalling. But very few people outside his intimate group knew of his difficulties. He would often be very reluctant even to accept the help proffered, for he did not like that anybody should undergo any sacrifice for him. One day there was not a drop of ghee in the Math to fry chapatti. He was in a fix and began pacing up and down the verandah, not knowing where help would come from. As a strange coincidence, a student of his class approached him exactly that time and whispered into his ear about his intention of contributing his mite to the Math as he had a promotion in the office. But the Swami did not at first agree to accept anything from him, lest it should cause him some hardship. It was only after great insistence and supplication that the Swami agreed to have some quantity of ghee. If questioned as to how the Swami was meeting his bodily wants, he would say with placid composure, ‘God sends me whenever I want anything.’ ‘If we cannot get on altogether without help, then why not ask the Lord Himself? Why go to others?’ he would say. And on many occasions help would come to the Swami in quite unexpected ways. A devotee says, ‘Once the birthday of Sri Ramakrishna was near and no money had been received for celebration. It was midnight and I was sleeping in the Math, when I suddenly woke up, roused by strange sounds in the hall. Looking about, I could see the Swami pacing up and down like a lion in a cage, mumbling noisily with every breath. I was afraid to see him in that condition, but I understood later that it was his praying for help to feed the poor. The next morning money did come. A large donation was received from the Yuvaraja of Mysore who had begun to admire the


Swami, having read his book The Universe and Man, just then published.’ Without caring for his bodily wants, quite indifferent to his personal needs, he worked tremendously to spread the message of the Master and in the cause of Vedanta. On certain days of the week, he had to lecture more than twice or thrice. His classes were scattered over different parts of the city, and to many of them he had for a long time to go on foot. Sometimes he would return to the Math quite exhausted, and as little energy was left for cooking, he would finish his night meal with only a piece of bread purchased from a bakery. People would wonder how he could stand such a severe strain. But the secret of this lay perhaps in his complete self-surrender to the Lord. Once he said, ‘Suppose a pen were conscious; it could say, “I have written hundreds of letters”, but actually it has done nothing, for the one who holds it has written the letters. So, because we are conscious, we think we are doing all these things, whereas in reality we are as much an instrument in the hands of a Higher Power as the pen is in our hands, and He makes all things possible.’ While holding classes or delivering lectures he never posed himself as a superior personage having a right to teach others. He considered himself always as a humble servant of the Lord. Sometimes on returning to the Math after delivering lectures, he would undergo some self-imposed punishment and earnestly pray to the Master that the lecture work might not give rise to any sense of egotism in him. Sometimes he had strange experiences in the classes, and he had a novel way of meeting them. After the first enthusiasm had died out, all his classes were not so wellattended. That depended also on what part of the city the class was held in. If, for any reason, not a single student happened to come to any of his classes, he would still give his discourse as usual in the empty room or spend in meditation the period fixed for the class. If asked the reason for these unusual actions, the Swami would reply, ‘I have not come here to teach others. This work is like a vow to me, and I am fulfilling it irrespective of whether anyone comes or does not come to my class.’


With regard to what he taught, he was uncompromising and fearless. Someone, finding him to hold high the ideals of renunciation and fearing least some of the young listeners might be attracted to the ideal, suggested that certain devotees who were subscribing towards the maintenance of the Math might not like his teaching such things to the young people. One hearing these remarks, Swami Ramakrishnananda flared up and thundered forth, ‘What, am I to preach anything other than what I have learnt from my Master? If the Math cannot be financially maintained, I shall very gladly find accommodation in the verandah of one of my student’s houses.’ His work was not confined only to the city of Madras; but is spread throughout the Madras as Presidency. One of the most important field of his activities was the Mysore state. When the name and influence of Swami Ramakrishnananda as a bearer of the message of the Master and Swamiji began to spread, the Vedanta Society of Ulsoor in Bangalore sent him an invitation in 1903 to deliver a course of lecturer there. He accepted the invitation, and a splendid reception was accorded on his arrival. He stayed in Bangalore for three weeks. During this period, he delivered about a dozen public lectures and held conversations morning and evening. His lectures were attended by a large number of eager and enthusiastic people, and his classes were also equally popular. In the same year he carried the message of his Master to Mysore as well, where he delivered a series of five lectures. A noteworthy address was given in Sanskrit to the pundits of the place assembled in the local Sanskrit College. In this he rose to the height of his eloquence and clearly showed how the message of his Master harmonized the interpretations of the Vedanta by different Acharyas. It was very bold to him to do so, for the Sanskrit scholars of the South, strong champions of orthodoxy as they were, could hardly believe in anything outside the particular system of philosophy they followed. The interest created by him in Bangalore was kept up by the Ulsoor Vedanta Society. In the following year he was again invited to


Bangalore, this time to open a permanent center. He delivered a series of lectures, opened some classes and left a junior Swami there to continue the work. In August 1906, he revisited Bangalore and Mysore with his brother disciple Swami Abhedananda, who had recently come from America. The two Swamis together delivered several lectures and consolidated the Vedanta work in Mysore State. During this visit the foundation stone of the Bangalore Ashrama was laid. After the building was constructed, Swami Brahmananda came on invitation to open it. Afterwards, Swami Ramakrishnananda would visit Bangalore whenever he could snatch away time from his busy life, and he directed the Ashrama and the Mission work in Bangalore and Mysore from Madras. Swami Ramkrishnananda also visited Trivandrum and spent about a month there creating enthusiasm in the minds of the people, Besides, he made extensive tours to several parts of South India, and as a result of this, centers were started in several important places. His fame as a teacher of Vedanta spread far and wide. Even from such distant places as Burma and Bombay he received invitations. He visited those places and achieved great success. Some of the discourses he delivered in various places have been published in book form. They now furnish spiritual sustenance to innumerable people who had not the opportunity to come into direct contact with him. Of these books The Universe and Man and The Soul of Man give lucid expositions of some of the fundamental principles of Vedanta. Sri Krishna, the Pastoral and Kingmaker, is as the tittle shows, the life of that great Divinity on earth and is a study of the hero as Godman. Swami Ramakrishnananda was not a very eloquent speaker. There was no oratorical flourish in his speech. But his sincerity and thorough grasp of spiritual realities made his speeches very impressive. He was always at his best in the conversational method of teaching, which appealed directly to the heart owing to the sincerity with which it was uttered. Great truths, complicated questions, controversial problems, and all the heights


and depths of ethics were discussed, but in the simplest manner possible, so that even a child might understand them. In day-to-day dealings Swami Ramakrishnananda was full of overflowing love. We have seen how at the Baranagore monastery he was ‘like a mother’ to all, taking extreme care of them. When any brother disciple of his came to the South on pilgrimage, he would be beside himself with joy, and did not know how sufficiently to take care of him. All feelings of Swami Ramakrishnananda welled forth, as it were, when Swami Brahmananda visited the South, and there was nothing he would not do for him. His attitude toward Swami Brahmananda was the logical outcome of his devotion to the Master. Because Sri Ramakrishna loved Swami Brahmananda so much, Swami Ramakrishnananda also treated him more with reverence than with brotherly love. It was sight to see Swami Ramakrishnananda, with his bulky body, prostrate himself before his great brother disciple in all humility. A similar attitude in Swami Ramakrishnananda, though in a more intense degree, was in evidence, when the Holy Mother, with a party of women devotees, came to the South on pilgrimage. It is said that on his occasion he worked so hard to remove even the slightest inconvenience that might befall the party, that his health permanently broke down. It was to his loving heart that the Ramakrishna Mission Students’ Home in Madras owed its origin. At Coimbatore he once found that all the members of a family, except a few helpless children, had been swept away by plague. The pitiable condition of these poor children was too much for the loving heart of the Swami so he took charge of them. This was the genesis of the educational activities of the Mission in the South, which have since expanded greatly. A teacher, he cared more for building up lives than for reaching a wide circle of indifferent auditors. He was a strict disciplinarian and insisted that all who came under his influence be perfect and exemplary in every detail of their conduct. Once a student was found sitting in his class with his chin resting on the palm of his hand. He at once said, ‘Do not sit like


that, it is a pensive attitude. You should always cultivate a cheerful attitude.’ Sometimes thoughtless visitors to the Math would take out the daily paper and begin to read. The Swami would at once administer a mild rebuke saying, ‘Put away your paper. You can read that anywhere. When you come here, you should think of God.’ Once a proud and vainglorious pundit came to the Math and began to talk of his plans for reforming temples, society, and so on. Swami Ramakrishnananda listened to him quietly for some time and then opened his lips to remark, ‘I wonder what God did before you were born.’ The man at once became silent, and the conversation turned to healthier things. The man afterwards left the Math with a better attitude of mind. Once Swami Ramakrishnananda and an American devotee were putting up in the royal guest quarters at Bangalore as the guests of the Maharaja of Mysore. One day member of the Maharaja’s official staff came to see them. The visitor began to detail some court gossip to the American devotee thinking that it would be a very entertaining topic of conversation. All the while that the conversation was going on, the Swami shifted his position in his chair again and again showing evident signs of great discomfort. When asked if he was feeling unwell, the Swami unsophisticatedly said, ‘I am all right, but I do not like your conversation.’ The visitor, however, took the rebuke without any offence and changed the subject of conversation. His own life was extremely disciplined. He was very regular and punctual in his habits. He would follow his self-imposed daily duties under any circumstances. As a rule, he began the day by reading the Gita and the Vishnu Sahasranama. Once the Swami passed the night outside the Math, to keep company with Swami Premananda, when the latter was on pilgrimage in the South. That night Swami Ramakrishnananda had not with him the Gita and the Vishnu Sahasranama. When he discovered this, he sent someone out to procure copies of those two books, so that he might not miss reading them next morning. Though in managing the monastery he was a stern disciplinarian, at heart he was extremely soft and kind. Once when the time came for the


departure of a junior Swami of the Order who had come to Madras, Swami Ramakrishnananda fed him well sitting by him and actually burst into tears when the latter was about to leave. Another time Swami Ramakrishnananda had gone to Bengal, and when he visited Calcutta, he learnt that a young brahmacharin of the Order who had for some time lived with him at Madras was lying ill at his parental home in the city. The Swami himself went to see the patient at his home. At this the brahmacharin was dumbfounded, that Swami Ramakrishnananda, who was held in such high esteem throughout the country, should come to his bedside. He could hardly believe his eyes. It was his love for humanity that impelled him to work so hard in Madras. But after some time, the body gave indications that it could no longer stand the stress of so much hard work. Yet the spirit was there. The Swami did not listen to the whisper of the flesh. In spite of his indifferent health, he carried on his hard labor till the body completely broke down, and the doctors diagnosed the disease as consumption. Word was sent to Calcutta, and his fellow monks there begged him to pass his last days with them. This he felt was best. He had thought of it, but not until the command came from the President of the Mission did, he leave Madras. In Calcutta he was housed at the monastery in Baghbazar, and the most noted physicians visited him of their own accord. But his condition grew worse. Most remarkable, however, was the strength of his spirit which burst forth in eloquent discourses concerning high spiritual matters, even whilst the body suffered most. One who loved him dearly, noticing him speak thus in this distressed state of body, asked him to desist. ‘Why?’ came the reply, ‘When I speak of the Lord, all pain leaves me, I forget the body.’ Even in delirium his mind and his voice were given to God. ‘Durga, Durga, Shiva, Shiva’, and the name of his Master were ever on his lips. His great esteem and his love for Christ, which was manifest throughout his lifetime, revived constantly in those days. Speaking of Jesus, he would become eloquent. He would speak of how Sri Ramakrishna had regarded


Christ and of how, when the Master had the vision of Christ during samadhi, the very body of the great founder of Christianity had entered into him. Swami Ramakrishnananda entered into Final Realization on 21 August 1911. TEACHINGS OF SWAMI RAMAKRISHNANANDA

We understand by God a being that is infinite in every way, infinitely powerful, infinitely lovely, infinitely conscious; and because He is infinite, He can never be finite. Mind is bound on all sides by ignorance, and if you compare your knowledge with your ignorance, your knowledge seems infinitesimal. Now it is impossible for the limited to conceive the unlimited. Our Master Sri Ramakrishna used to say that the poison of the cobra is most deadly, yet that poison does not hurt it. Similarly, Maya is inside God, but can never interfere with the nature of God any more than the poison can injure the cobra. God plays the part of a creator, that He may have the fun of creating, preserving, and destroying. That is the method He always follows when he wants to create, and this is God’s relationship with Maya. God is infinitely powerful, so He has the power to put down the irresistible power of Maya. But what is our relationship with Maya? We are her slaves. You cannot be destroyed by Maya, but she can make you miserable through eternity. Then how are we going to get rid of her? Only by the help of God can we hope to get rid of her. If you know that you are eternal and indestructible then you are not body, you are spirit, and the Self is beyond the reach of Maya, that Self is one with God. If you identify yourself with this real Self of yours and throw away yourself, then you can go beyond the dominion of Maya, and this path is known as Jnanamarga. Those who can resist the demands of the body, can afford to wag an incessant war against Maya and come out victorious. But they are very few. For the others, they can only take refuge at God’s feet.


What kind of devotion takes us to God? The child’s devotion to the mother. Why does the baby go to the mother? Because it has reasoned out that the mother is the best friend it has. And why do you go to God? Because you have previously reasoned out that God will help you, and one else can. So, as the baby goes to its mother, you will go to God. The souls, not being free and not knowing to guide themselves, on account of the limited nature of their minds, should be guided by God, their omnipotent and omniscient Master, if they want to get rid of death and countless woes; and their highest wisdom should consist in allowing themselves to be guided by God and not by themselves. No man who has true love towards God can be religious. Religion begins when attraction towards God is greater than attraction towards the world. The attraction towards the word mean egotism, attraction towards God means self-surrender. Actually, very few of us believe in God all the time. How do we know this? Because we allow anxieties and fears to arise in our minds. If we really have faith in God and in His infinite power of goodness, we can never feel fearful about anything. What makes the mind impure? Desire. Free the mind of all desires, and at once it becomes pure. A man, however, who has no idea of God, can never get rid of desire. The lover of God sees that instead of bringing enjoyment, these desires are the source of all miseries. He understands that in God alone he can find the satisfaction of all desires, for He is infinite bliss, and all other pleasure are finite and perishable. We seek matter first and spirit afterwards. We should reverse the process. Our hearts also must be free from any ulterior motive. If we love God for what we can get from Him in the world, we really love the world, not God, and we can never be true devotees. The true devotee loves God just for the joy of loving Him, because God is the Beloved. Ananda or bliss is the best definition of God. The real ideal of every human being is Satchidananda - eternal Life, infinite Knowledge, and


everlasting Bliss, for all men wish to live forever, to be all-knowing, and to have eternal bliss. But God alone is all-life, all-knowledge and allhappiness; therefore, God is really the ideal of every living being. Almost all men in the world have usurped the throne where God should sit. On that throne where God should be, a most worthless slave has been given place. This is the ego. When you know this, then drive out the ego. When you do this and become the slave or servant of God instead, you will realize your eternal nature. Being one with God, all fear of death will go, peace will come to you, and you will taste true Ananda (bliss). So long as we have no ideal to follow, we will have to heed the calls of our lower nature. A characterless man is a slave to all worldly enjoyment. All religions teach the necessity of hero-worship. Who is a hero? The man who has realized his oneness with God, who has self-knowledge, for religion is not a matter of talk or learning or faith, but a matter of realization. A man of realization alone is the true teacher, the guru. So, you must hear, study, understand, and then try to realize with the aid of a real guru. The path which leads you to realize life eternal is not by the exercise of your outgoing energies but by your ingoing energies. You must collect your energies and direct them inwards. You have been worshipping this god or your body for so many lives, it is not easy to begin to worship the true God all at once. If you would raise your Self, you must crucify the body and conquer the senses. Always mixing with the world and identifying ourselves with the body, we are prone to forget religion which awakens us to the real state of affairs which we are in, and opens to us the gate of eternal bliss, and keeps us away from being drawn down to the abject life of beasts - doing nothing but eating, drinking and making merry. Such being the case, there must be something will occasionally remind us as to who we are, an what we should do, so that we may not be altogether forgetful of our duties here. It is religion that fulfils this purpose.


SWAMI ABHEDANANDA

Swami Abhedananda was one of those rare souls who gathered around the magnetic personality of Sri Ramakrishna at Dakshineswar and afterwards became instrumental in the fulfilment of his divine mission. The name by which the Swami was known before his taking orders was Kaliprasad Chandra, he was born on 2 October 1866, in an enlightened family at Ahiritola in Calcutta. His mother Nayantara Devi was intensely devoted to the Goddess Kali, to whom she offered her wholesouled prayer for the birth of a gifted son. It was in response, as it were, to her ardent prayer that the child was born, and she named him ‘Kaliprasad’ to betoken the grace of the Divine Mother. Kaliprasad’s father, Rasiklal Chandra, was a senior teacher of English in the Oriental Seminary of Calcutta. He was no less pious than his devoted wife. No wonder that a child, who in after years shone as a bright luminary in the spiritual firmament of India, should be born of such a worthy couple. His school life began at the age of five, and he excelled all his schoolmates in study, games, paintings, and similar other pursuits. He often listened with rapt attention to the inspiring stories of the great Indian epics from the lips of the dear parents who, knowing the mental make-up of the boy,


always tried to kindle in him an aspiration to emulate the lives of the great spiritual heroes of the land. From his very boyhood he was inclined to Sanskrit studies. At the age of eighteen he creditably passed the Entrance Examination from the Calcutta Oriental Seminary, in which, as already mentioned, his father was a teacher of English. Gifted with a genius for philosophic contemplation the boy soon began to interest himself in solving the various intricate problems of life. His desire to become a philosopher was greatly stimulated when he read for the first time in Wilson’s History of India that Shankaracharya was the propounded of the Advaita system of philosophy. This opened a new chapter in his life. His perusal of the Gita served only to intensify all the more his yearning to follow in the footsteps of the great Acharyas (propounds of systems of thought) and to study their philosophies. But along with this ever-increasing thirst for acquiring spiritual wisdom, he felt as well a strong urge to widen the bounds of his intellectual knowledge by studying the masterpieces of great savants of the East and West. Even at this tender age he finished reading not only such abstruse book as John Stuart Mill’s Logic, three essays on Religion, Herschel’s Astronomy, Ganot’s Physics, Lewis’ History of Philosophy, and Hamilton’s philosophy, but also the great works of Kalidasa, Bhavabhuti, Banabhatta, and other eminent poets of our land, a fact with gives ample evidence of his prodigious intellect and extraordinary genius. His intellectual allegiance was not confined to any particular school of thought. He developed even at this early age a remarkable sympathy for all faiths. That is why we find him so intently listening to the illuminating lectures delivered by the distinguished leaders and exponents of Christianity, Brahmanism, and Hinduism. In 1882-83 he attended a series of public lectures delivered by the noted Hindu philosopher, Shashadhar Tarkachudamani, on the six systems of Hindu philosophy. He was deeply impressed when he heard his pregnant discourse on the Yoga system of Patanjali and learnt about the infinite possibilities of the


human soul. Thenceforth he made a special study of some of the most authoritative books on the subject and felt a strong desire to practice Yoga. But he was told by his friends not to follow any of the methods described in the Yoga Sutras without the proper guidance of a competent preceptor. The boy bow began to search for a suitable teacher who would make him a real Yogi and teach him how to attain to the Nirvikalpa Samadhi, the crowning glory of man’s spiritual experiences. One of his classmates, with whom he discussed the matter, told him of Sri Ramakrishna and directed to go to the great saint. Kaliprasad grew restless to see the Master. But for some reason or other, he could not get a suitable opportunity to go to Dakshineswar for a long time. At last, one day in the middle of 1884, he started at noon for the temple-garden in the grilling heat of the sun. But great was his disappointment when he came to learn after reaching the place that Sri Ramakrishna had gone to Calcutta and would not return till after nightfall. Sorely perplexed, he sat down with a heavy heart under a tree. After a while, a young man, Shahi by name (afterwards Swami Ramakrishnananda), appeared there and asked him in loving accents the reason for his coming to Dakshineswar. Kali opened his heart to him. Shahi, coming to know that Kali had not eaten anything at noon, at once made arrangements for his meal and midday siesta. Kali passed the whole afternoon in a breathless thrill of expectancy. The day rolled on into night, but still the Master did not come! The joy of the boy, however, knew no bounds when at about nine o’clock Sri Ramakrishna came back to Dakshineswar. The boy silently entered the Master’s room and made obeisance to him. Without any hesitation, he expressed his desire to learn Yoga from him so that he might attain to the highest state of samadhi. At the very first sight, the Master fathomed the depth of the boy’s soul, and was delighted to notice the vast spiritual possibilities latent in him. He instinctively felt that Kali belonged to the inner circle of his young devotees. Sri Ramakrishna was overjoyed to hear the words of the boy and said, ‘You were a great Yogi in your previous birth. This is your last


birth. I shall initiate you into the mysteries of Yoga practices.’ So, saying he endearingly drew him to his side, wrote a mantra on his tongue and placed his right hand on the chest of the boy. The mystic touch of the Master brought about a wonderful revolution in his mind, and he immediately became buried in deep meditation. After that Kali began to practice religious disciplines in right earnest under the loving guidance of the Master, and through his grace was blessed with many spiritual experiences. He now began to avail himself of every opportunity to run away from the stifling atmosphere of his home and to sit at the feet of the Master in the calm and elevating environs of the temple-garden of Dakshineswar. His thirsty soul drank deep at the perennial fount of heavenly wisdom which issued from the lips of the Master for the spiritual comfort of eager aspirants. At time rolled on, Kali found him the embodiment of the Absolute Truth inculcated by the highest philosophy as well as of the universal religion which underlies all sectarian religions of the world. From the Master he eventually realized that the three orders of metaphysical thought - dualism, qualified monism, and monism are but stages on the way to the Supreme Truth. They are not contradictory but complementary to one another. Thus, the validity of all stages that are harmoniously knitted in a graded series of spiritual experiences culminating in the realization of the Formless Absolute - the One without a second - was made clear to him by the Super-mystic of Dakshineswar. Kali soon became intimately acquainted with Narendranath, the chief disciple of Sri Ramakrishna, and he often held learned discussions with him on various abstruse points of philosophy, both Eastern and Western. During the illness of the Master at Shyampukur and Cossipore in 188586, Kali, along with others, devoted himself heart and soul to the service of the Master and, after his passing, he renounced the world and became sannyasin with the monastic name of Swami Abhedananda. At the Baranagore monastery where one by one the young disciple of the Master gathered together and banded themselves into a holy fraternity of monks


under the leadership of Narendranath, Kali used very often to shut himself up in his own room for intense spiritual practices as also for a systematic study of Vedanta and Western philosophy. This rigorous course of spiritual discipline and his deep devotion to the study of Vedanta received the admiration of all and earned for him the significant epithets of ‘Kali Tapasvi (the ascetic Kali) and ‘Kali Vedanti’. During this time, he composed beautiful Sanskrit hymns on Sri Ramakrishna and the Holy Mother. The latter was deeply impressed when she heard the excellent hymn composed about her own self, and she blessed him heartily, saying, ‘May the Goddess of Learning ever dwell in your throat.’ Indeed, this blessing of the Holy Mother came to be fulfilled both in letter and in spirit. But very soon the ‘call of the forest’- a tendency to embrace a wandering life according to the orthodox traditions of monastic life - was most irresistibly felt by Swami Abhedananda. And he travelled barefoot from place to place, depending entirely on whatever chance would bring to him. He endured all sorts of privation and hardship and practiced austerities of all kinds. He walked up to the sources of the Ganga and the Yamuna, spent most of the time in contemplation of the Absolute, visited sacred places like Kedarnath and Badrinarayan, Hardwar and Puri, Dwarka and Rameswaram, and met in the course of his extensive travels some of the greatest saints and scholars of the time in various centers of religious culture. While in Rishikesh he made a special study of Vedanta under a celebrated monk named Swami Dhanraj Giri who was noted for his profundity of scholarship and was well versed in the six system of Hindu philosophy. Needless to say, this rich and varied experience of his itinerant life made him eminently fit to deliver to humanity at large in after years the lofty and universal message of his Master. Up to this time the ideal of these young monks had been to strive for their personal liberation and realization of the Supreme Atman by severe penance and meditation, remaining as much as possible aloof from the world in consonance with the prevailing Hindu idea, sanctified by


tradition and sanctioned by the sages and seers from hoary antiquity. But Swami Vivekananda, was then in America, brought home to the minds of his gurubhais, through his inspiring epistles, the fact that the mission of his life was to create a new Order of monks in India who would dedicate their lives to serve others and scatter broadcast over the entire world the life-giving ideas of the Master. The idea of personal liberation, he pointed out, was unworthy of those who believed themselves to be the favored disciples of a prophet. Because of his profound faith in the leader, Swami Abhedananda, together with other brother disciples accepted his views knowing that the voice of Swami Vivekananda was the voice of the Master. Thus, a new orientation of outlook on monastic life came upon him. In response to an invitation from Swamiji who was then preaching Vedanta in London, he went there in the latter part of 1896. By way of introducing him to the London public Swamiji announced even before Swami Abhedananda’s public appearance that a learned brother disciple of his, who had just arrived from India, would deliver a lecture on Advaita Vedanta at the next meeting to be held in the ChristoTheosophical Society of London. The new Swami was taken by surprise as he had not been previously consulted in the matter! His name was flashed in handbills and newspapers even without his knowledge! He was sorely perplexed and became extremely nervous, inasmuch as he had not before this stood on any public platform to deliver a speech either in English or in any Indian language. It was indeed a fiery ordeal for him. He strongly remonstrated with Swamiji for this step which he thought unwise, but all his arguments were of no avail. Swamiji heartened him with the inspiring words, ‘Depend on him who has ever given me strength and courage in all the trials of my life.’ These words comforted him, and relying entirely on the infinite grace of the Master, he appeared at the meeting on the appointed day. The hall was packed to suffocation, and all eyes were fixed upon the radiant countenance of the heroic soul who stood to discharge his


responsibility at the crucial hour. The maiden speech which Swami Abhedananda delivered before the Society was a splendid success. At this, Swamiji’s joy knew no bounds. Referring to this happy occasion. Mr. Eric Hammond, an English disciple of Swami Vivekananda, writes: ‘The Master (Swami Vivekananda) was more than content to have effaced himself in order that his brother’s opportunity should be altogether unhindered. The whole impression had in it a glowing beauty quite indescribable. It was as though the Master thought, “Even if I perish on this plane, my message will be sounded through these dear lips and the world will hear it.” Hearing this lecture, Captain Sevier, another English disciple of Swamiji made the pertinent observation, ‘Swami Abhedananda is a born preacher. Wherever he will go, he will have success.’ Swami Vivekananda was fully confident that even in his absence Swami Abhedananda would be the fittest person to carry on, with success, the work which had been started in London. So, he entrusted him with the charge of his classes on Vedanta and Raja Yoga and left for India in December 1896. Swami Abhedananda continued his classes and delivered public lectures in churches and before religious and philosophical societies in London and its suburbs for one year. During his stay in London, he formed acquaintance with many distinguished savants including Prof. Max Muller and Prof. Paul Deussen. His eloquence, his lucid exposition of Vedanta philosophy and, above all, his depth of spiritual realization made a profound impression on all who came in touch with him and listened to his illuminating lectures. It reflects much credit on his manysided genius that even within this short period he succeeded in creating in the minds of the Western people a deep-seated regard for richness and integrity of Indian thought and culture. In 1897 a new chapter was opened in his eventful life. At the request of American friends and with the approval of Swamiji, Swami Abhedananda crossed the Atlantic and landed in New York on 9 August to take charge of the Vedanta Society which had already been started there. He was almost penniless at this time and had to work hard to push


on the work. By dint of perseverance, self-confidence and unflinching devotion to the Master he was soon able to create a field for himself and tide over the swarm of difficulties that surrounded him at the initial stage of his work. But his success soon excited the jealousy of the Christian missionaries, who began to fabricate scandalous lies to bring the Swami into disrepute. Nothing daunted, Swami Abhedananda carried on his work with his usual vigor and sangfroid. He was soon acclaimed as a great exponent of Hindu thought and culture and was invited to speak before various learned societies. His profundity of scholarship, incisive intellectual powers, oratorical talents, and his charming personality made him so popular that in New York itself, in the Mott Memorial Hall he had to deliver ninety lectures to satisfy public demand. Even the greatest savants of America became greatly impressed by his intellectual brilliance. On one occasion in 1898 Prof. William James held a discussion with him in his house on the problem of the Unity of the Ultimate Reality. It lasted for nearly four hours, and Prof. Royce, Prof. Lanman, Prof. Shaler, and Dr. Janes, the Chairman of the Cambridge Philosophical Conferences, took part. Prof. James was finally forced to admit that from the Swami’s standpoint it was impossible to deny ultimate unity, but declared that he still could not believe it. In most of his lectures he called upon his audience to cultivate purity of thought and a spirit of love for all, irrespective of caste, creed, or nationality. ‘Whether we believe in God or not,’ said the Swami, ‘Whether we have faith in prophets or not, if we have self-control, concentration, truthfulness, and disinterested love for all, then we are on the way to spiritual perfection. On the contrary, if one believes in God or in a creed and does not possess these four, he is no more spiritual than an ordinary man of the world. In fact, his belief is only a verbal one.’ The Swami was never tired of making it distinctly clear to his Western audience that the religion or philosophy taught in Vedanta is not merely and intellectual assumption, but is the result of a long and arduous search and inquiry into the ultimate principle of this universe. It is this Supreme


Principle - the Unchangeable Substance - which has been expressed by human minds under various names such as God, Creator, Designer, First Cause, the Father, Jehovah, Allah, or Brahman, in different systems of thought. ‘If we wish to know this Ultimate Truth,’ said the Swami, ‘we must go beyond the pale of nature and seek the explanation in the realm of the Absolute. Nature with her manifoldness deludes us and lands us in uncertainties. The scientists, even after a careful scrutiny of natural phenomena, have arrived at certain conclusions which are like conclusions in which nothing is concluded. The latest finding of science is that the ultimate goal of everything is unknown and unknowable. Here Vedanta comes to the rescue and advises its students to study not merely nature, but our Self or Atman which is beyond nature, beyond name and form, beyond multiplicity. All confusion will be removed when the Absolute Truth, as taught in Vedanta, will be realized.’ The Swami’s learned exposition of Vedanta in the light of modern scientific knowledge carried in it such an irresistible force of appeal that he was able to enlist such adherents as would not be convinced unless shown that Huxley, Tyndall, Spencer, or Kant agreed in substance with a particular view advanced by Vedanta. He travelled extensively all through the United States, Alaska, and Mexico and delivered addresses on various phases of Vedanta philosophy in almost all the principal cities of America. He made frequent trips to Europe also, delivering lectures to appreciative audiences in different parts of the Continent and making contact with eminent scholars. He proved himself not only an able and efficient teacher, but furthered the success of his work in every way by his remarkable organizing ability, sound judgement and well-balanced opinion, and by his power of adaptability to Western methods of work and teaching. Contemplative by nature, he was able to maintain a poise and calm even in the midst of his strenuous activities, that added grace and beauty to his manifold works and acted with telling effect upon all who came in contact with his magnetic personality. His scholarship was the despair of many, and his


intellectual brilliance, dignified bearing, as also his nobility of character, commanded loving homage from even the most aristocratic sections of the American people. Under his able leadership, the seeds sown by Swami Vivekananda on the American soil went on ever growing vigorously as days passed, striking their roots deep into the heart of the nation. Except for a short visit to India in 1906, he thus spent almost a quarter of century in laudable work of spreading the message of the Master in prominent centers of alien culture. He was not only a powerful speaker, but also a prolific writer. If his spoken words molded the lives of hundreds of persons, his printed thought influence a wider circle of people in different countries. His writings contain deep philosophy with a great wealth of information couched in a very popular style. As such, they have been of immense help in broadcasting the philosophical and spiritual idea of India. As a matter of fact, they constitute a valuable legacy to the spiritually inclined souls all over the world. Swami Abhedananda, after a long and successful work in America, returned to India in 1921. On his way home he visited Japan, China, the Philippines, Singapore, Kula Lumpur, and Rangoon and spread the message of the Master in those places also. The Swami was now fiftyseven years old. Even at this advanced age his spirit of adventure was not diminished in the least. After reaching India he started on a long tour and went as far as Tibet and Kabul. He also visited Peshawar, the Punjab and other important places of Northern India on his return journey and reached the Belur Math in 1923. To carry on Vedanta work in India according to his own plan and method, he soon established a center under the name of Ramakrishna Vedanta Society in the heart of Calcutta. Attracted by his personality, many distinguished men of the metropolis soon gathered round him an helped him in spreading the Master’s message far and wide. A Bengali monthly under the name of Vishwavani was soon published to facilitate his missionary activities. In fact, his soul knew no rest, and he spent the


last drop of his energy for the spiritual benefit of those who came in touch with him. But unusual strain on his nerves at this age began to tell seriously upon his health. His iron constitution broke down almost beyond cure under the pressure of work. But his weakness and ailments notwithstanding, the Swami did not lack his wonted fire and enthusiasm when he was called upon to preside over the Parliament of Religions held at the Town Hall, Calcutta, on the occasion of the birth centenary of Sri Ramakrishna in 1937. He rose equal to the occasion and he never forgot to emphasize in the course of his learned address the synthetic message of the Master, ‘the mission of Bhagavan Sri Ramakrishna’, said the Swami, ‘was to show by his living example how a truly spiritual man, being dead to the world of senses, can live on the plane of God-consciousness … For the first time it was demonstrated that all religions were like so many paths leading to the same goal, that the realization of the same Almighty is the highest ideal of Christianity, Mohammedanism, Judaism, Zoroastrianism, Hinduism, as well as of all other religions of the world. Sri Ramakrishna’s mission was to proclaim the eternal truth that God is one but has many aspects, and that the same one God is worshipped by different nations under various names and forms; that He is personal, impersonal, and beyond both; that He is with name and form and yet nameless and formless.’ In conclusion the Swami observed, ‘I hope that this Parliament of Religion will sound the death-knell of all communal strife and struggle, and will create a great opportunity for promoting fellowship among various faiths.’ This was indeed his last public utterance and bears eloquent testimony to his deep-seated loyalty to the Master as also to the sterling stuff he was made of. The Swami left the mortal frame on 8 September 1939, and passed into the realm of eternal bliss to enjoy a well-earned rest. The passing of such an outstanding personality from the arena of Indian life was mourned by a large number of people in India and abroad. He was one of the remarkable spiritual and cultural ambassadors of India to the outside world. His was indeed a life in which we find a happy blending of


profound spirituality uplift of humanity. He came to the world in obedience to the Divine Will to fulfil the mission of the Master, and after his task had been finished, he went back to the Source of Light and Life from which he came. TEACHINGS OF SWAMI ABHEDANANDA

If you desire to have firm and unshakable faith and devotion to the Lord, you should also take to tapasya, hard austerities. Tapasya does not mean aimless wandering hither and thither, it really means regular and steadfast japa, meditation, and self-control. If one prays a yearning heart to the Lord to get devotion and faith, he grants it. So, pray in this way: ‘O Lord, be graciously pleased to bless me with unswerving devotion and unshakable faith. May my mind and heart be ever attracted to Thy lotus feet, and may it not wander from there in any other direction.’ What one seeks, that one gets. You have got what you wanted. When you really hanker after God, He will raise your mind from things of the world and grant you His vision. But as long as you are attached to the world and are strongly inclined to the things of the world can you yearn for the Lord with all your heart? Practice to be like one kitten, calling on their mother and remain with joy and satisfaction in the place and state in which She, the Divine Mother, puts you. Complete resignation to the will of the Divine Mother is what is wanted. You must become ever joined with the Lord wholly without any distraction. Pure and absolute single-minded devotion to the Lord is what you should cultivate. Unless one has inner peace and contentment, one will find restlessness and suffering wherever one goes. Raise a wall all around your mind by your discrimination. Do not allow the distraction of external circumstances to enter your mind. Know that this is sadhana (spiritual practice). You cannot find in the world any place after your heart. Learn to turn unfavorable circumstances into favorable ones. The mind is all in


all. You cannot hear the rumbling sound of the carriage if you withdraw your mind from your ears. Keep to your helm, and pray to the Lord. He is our help and mainstay. Know that you will not be at all tormented by mental unrest if you, without being sentimental, dedicate the good or bad result of your actions to the lotus feet of the Lord. There is no need for you to be impatient for doing japa or meditation and flying to solitude for the purpose. Sri Ramakrishna used to say, ‘Meditate in a corner, or in the forest, or in the mind.’ The sadhaka who lives in a city, can sit inside the mosquito curtain and easily do this japa and meditation in the night without distraction. Why should you be afraid of doing work? If the mind is not purified by work, one cannot attain true knowledge. Wherever you go with your little mind, the mind will also accompany you and abide with you. It is by the power of habit that evil thoughts rise in the mind. Form a contrary habit by continued practice, and gradually the habit of evil thoughts may not arise in the mind. Bad thoughts gain strength by association. Hence, associate with the good and give up evil company. When the mind becomes steady by continued practice of japa, meditation is accomplished by itself. Realize the idea that you are the witness of the mind. Lust, anger, and other deadly enemies are the attributes of the mind, and so they cannot touch the soul. Raise your mind to the Ajna Chakra (center between the eyebrows), and ponder over the truth that lust, anger, and the rest are not the attributes of the soul. Meditate on this idea. Repeat the great truth: ‘I am Brahman’, and contemplate on the soul which is the witness, the inspirer, the absolute, the one without any attribute. Your duty for the present (when you have mental unrest) is complete resignation to the will of God. Since your petty will is not being fulfilled, give it up and drift, wholly depending on His divine will, then you will get peace. That you are feeling the bondage of the world and finding no peace is in itself a means of progress in the spiritual world.


Realizing that the work you have taken in hand is worship, keep in mind the idea that you are serving Him and dedicate the fruits of work to Him. If you practice resignation to the will of the Lord, you will get peace of mind. Man is a slave to his passion, which is the same as desires, and desires are ever associated with selfishness. Selfishness means the desire to seek for food and raiment and happiness for oneself and one’s family, without any consideration as to whether one’s countrymen fare ill or well. The idea of looking on others as oneself never springs in them. This selfishness itself is ignorance. That is why any mental tendency or idea that is associated with selfishness is narrow. This keeps a man confined within his own body or limited self, his mind never expands. He thinks that whatever is favorable to himself is good, and whatever is unfavorable is bad. Such people never get any peace in this world, their mind is ever aflame with peacelessness. The essentials of religion are principally two: Self-knowledge and selfcontrol. By religion I do not mean any particular doctrines, dogmas, beliefs, or faiths but I mean the realization in our daily life, in each case of the worship of the Supreme Being, which is the ideal of our religion. Desires are of two kinds - good and bad. When desires are associated with selfishness, they are bad, but when desires are motiveless or selfless, they are good. Lust, anger, and greed - these three spiring from bad desires, and they harm men. The men of realization go beyond desires. To go beyond desires means to become free from desires or, hankering for results. Freedom from desires and hankering for results leads to the purification of the heart, and the knowledge of the Self dawns when the mind becomes pure. Virtue and vice reside in the mind alone. In the Self there is neither virtue nor vice. The real purpose of life is to gain self-knowledge; life is not meant for a discussion as to whether virtue or vice exists. Virtue and vice arise from desires. One can have no peace so long as one is a slave to desires. Peace arises from detachment. Peace means the conquest of desires. And the way to conquest of desires is through doing good to


others, striving for the welfare of others. Instead of thinking about oneself, one should think of others, this leads to a gradual elimination of the nervousness of mind. Purification of mind means nothing but the annihilation of the egocentric idea and removal of selfishness from the mind. The more the mind expands, the more are the egoistic ideas annihilated. When the mind is freed from all nervousness, it becomes pure, and the knowledge of Brahman gets revealed in that pure mind. Diverse are the desires of man, a thousand desires hide themselves behind any one of them. Thus, there is no end of desires - one following the other in unending succession. That is why enlightened ones speak of annihilating desires. Enjoyment can never destroy enjoyment; it is only through renunciation that one can go beyond enjoyment. Renunciation alone can bring peace. Ignorance is the root of all evil. Ignorance means absence of the knowledge of the Self. Ignorance or Maya may also mean false knowledge. That is why Maya and ignorance mean the same thing. Perhaps it will lead to better comprehension if Maya is compared to a dream rather than to a mirage. For as in a dream, a man perceives many things as true, which are really false or untrue, and again perceives them just as they are when the dream is off, just so in Maya. Whatever is perceived as true in dream, is perceived as false in the waking state. As dream is known to be false in the waking state, so also the whole world is seen to be false, that is changeful, when the knowledge of the Self is attained. To go beyond Maya, one needs discrimination and renunciation. Even gods cannot escape Maya unless they have these two.


SWAMI ADBHUTANANDA

‘Latu is the greatest miracle of Sri Ramakrishna’, Swamiji once said with reference to Swami Adbhutananda. ‘Having absolutely no education, he has attained to the highest wisdom simply at the touch of the Master.’ Yes, Latu Maharaj, by which name Swami Adbhutananda was popularly known, was the peer of the Master in this respect that he was entirely innocent of the knowledge of the three R’s. Nay, he even surpassed the Master in this ignorance; for whereas the Master could somehow manage to read and write, with Latu Maharaj any reading or writing was out of question. Once Sri Ramakrishna attempted to teach young Latu how to read and write. But in spite of repeated attempts Latu pronounced the Bengali alphabet in such a distorted way that the Master, out of sheer despair, gave up the attempt to educate Latu. It did not matter, however, that Latu had no book-learning. Book supply us knowledge by proxy, as it were. Latu had direct access to the fountainhead of Knowledge. The result was that great scholars and philosophers would sit dumb at his feet to hear the words of wisdom that dropped from his lips. Sri Ramakrishna used to say that when a ray of light comes from the Great Source of all


light, all book-learning loses its value. His own life bore testimony to this fact. And to some extent this could be witnessed even in the life of Swami Adbhutananda, his disciple. The early name of Swami Adbhutananda was Rakhturam, which was shortened to Latu. He was born of humble parents in a village in the district of Chapra in Bihar. His early life is shrouded in obscurity. It was very difficult to draw him out on that point. As a sannyasin, he was discreetly silent on matters relating to his home and relations. If anybody would ask him any question about his early days he would sharply answer, ‘Giving up all thought about God will you be busy about these trifles?’ And then he would become so grave that the questioner would be awed into silence. Once a devotee expressed a desire to write a biography of Latu Maharaj. To his he raised objection saying, ‘What is the use of writing my life? If you want to write a biography, just write the biography of the Master and of Swamiji. That will be doing good to the world.’ From the meagre details that fell from the lips of Latu Maharaj in his unguarded moments it was known that his parents were very poor - so much that they could hardly make both ends meet in spite of their constant hard labor. Scarcely was Latu five years old when he lost both his parents. His uncle then looked after him. As ill luck would have it, Latu’s uncle also had an unfortunate turn of circumstances and he had to leave his parental homestead and come to Calcutta for means of livelihood. The boy Latu also accompanied him, and after a hard struggle for some days in Calcutta got employment as a house-boy in the house of Ramchandra Datta, who was a devotee of Sri Ramakrishna. As a servant, Latu was hard-working and faithful, but he had a keen sense of self-respect even at the early age. Once a friend of Ramchandra gave the indication of a suspicion that Latu might pocket some money from the amount given him for marketing. Young Latu at once flared up and said in half Bengali and half Hindi words (which constituted his means of communication), ‘Know for certain, sir, I am servant but not a


thief.’ With such firmness and dignity did he utter these words that the man was at once silenced. But he reported the matter to Ramchandra, who, however, supported Latu rather than his friend - the boy-servant had already won the confidence of the master so much. Unsophisticated as he was, Latu was very plain-spoken, sometimes to the point of supposed rudeness. And he was no respecter of persons. As such, even friends of Ramchandra had sometimes to fear Latu. This characteristic, good or bad, could be seen in Latu Maharaj throughout his life. Ramchandra being a devotee, his house had a religious atmosphere and religious discussions could be heard there. This greatly influenced the mind of Latu, especially at his impressionable age. Once Latu heard Ram Babu saying, ‘One who is sincere and earnest about God realizes Him as sure as anything’, ‘One should go into solitude and pray and weep for Him, then and then only will He reveal Himself’, and such other things. These simple words impressed Latu so much that throughout his whole life he remembered them, and often would he repeat them to others exactly as they were heard. From these words he found a clue as to how to build up his religious life, and they shaped his life. Sometimes Latu could be seen lying down, covering himself with a blanket, his eyes moistened with tears which he was wiping with his left hand. The kind ladies of the house thought that the young boy was weeping for his uncle or village association, and they would try to console him. Only the incidents of his later life indicated why Latu wept at that time. At Ramchandra’s house, Latu heard of Sri Ramakrishna, and naturally he felt eager to see him. And soon opportunities offered themselves to him to go to Dakshineswar and meet the Master. Ramchandra used to send things to the Master through the boy. At the very first meeting, brought about in this way, the Master was greatly impressed with the spiritual potentiality of the boy, and Latu felt immensely drawn to the Master even without knowing anything about his greatness. The pent-up feelings of love of this orphan boy found here an outlet for expression, and he felt so very attached to Sri Ramakrishna that henceforward it was impossible


for Latu to do his allotted duties with as much vigor and attention as he could command formerly. All at Ramachandra’s house noticed in him a kind of indifference to everything, but they love him so much that they did not like to disturb him. Shortly after Latu’s meeting with the Master, the latter went to Kamarpukur and remained there for about eight months. Latu felt a great void in his heart at this absence of the one whom he loved so much. But he would still go to Dakshineswar now and then and pass some time there, sad and morose. Those who knew him, but could not dive into his mind, thought he had perhaps been reprimanded for some neglect of duty at the house of Ramchandra and had come to ease his mind. For how could they know the great anguish that torments a real devotee’s heart? Latu Maharaj afterwards said, ‘You cannot conceive of the suffering I had at that time. I would go to the Master’s room, wander in the garden, stroll hither and thither. But everything would seem insipid. I would weep alone to unburden my heart. It was only Ram Babu who could to some extent understand my feelings, and he gave me a photograph of the Master.’ When the Master returned from his native village, Latu acquired a new life, as it were, and he would lose no opportunity to go to Dakshineswar to meet him. As Ramchandra would now and then send fruits and sweets to the Master through this boy-servant of his, Latu welcomed and greatly longed for such occasions. Gradually it became impossible for Latu to continue his service. He openly expressed his desire to give up his job and remain at Dakshineswar. The members of Ramchandra’s family would poke fun at him by saying, ‘Who will feed and clothe you at Dakshineswar?’ But with this innocent boy that was not at all a serious problem. The only thing wanted was to be with the Master. At this time Sri Ramakrishna also felt the necessity of an attendant, and when he proposed the name of Latu to Ramchandra, the latter at once agreed to spare him. Thus, Latu go the long-wished-for opportunity of serving Sri


Ramakrishna. As a mark of endearment, the Master call him ‘Leto’, or ‘Neto’. But ‘Latu’ was the name which remained current. How service to the guru leads to God-realization is exemplified in the life of Latu Maharaj. He was to Sri Ramakrishna what Hanuman was to Sri Ramachandra. He did not care for anything in the world, his only concern in life was how to serve the Master faithfully. A mere wish of the Master was more than a law - a sacred injunction with Latu. Latu was once found sleeping in the evening. Perhaps he was overtired by the day’s work. The Master mildly reproved Latu for sleeping at such an odd time, saying, ‘If you sleep at such a time, when will you meditate?’ That was enough, and Latu gave up sleeping at night. For the rest of his life, he would have a short nap in the daytime, and the whole night he would pass awake, a living illustration of the verse in the Gita: ‘What is night to the ordinary people is day to the Yogi.’ Unsophisticated as Latu was, he had this great advantage: he would spend all his energy in action and waste no time in vain discussions. Modern minds, the sad outcome of the education they receive, will doubt everything they hear, and therefore discuss, reason, and examine to see if that be true or false. Thus, so much energy is lost in arriving at the truth that nothing is left for action. It was just the opposite with Latu. As soon as he heard a word from the Master, he rushed headlong to put it into practice. In later life, he would rebuke devotees, who came to him for instruction, by saying, ‘You will simply talk and talk and do nothing. What’s the use of mere discussion?’ Of course, Latu was fortunate in having guru in whose words there was no room for any doubt or discussion and whom it was blessedness to obey and the more implicit that obedience, the greater was the benefit that could be reaped. And Latu was a fit disciple to take the fullest advantage of this rare privilege. When Latu came to the Master he did not bother much about the spiritual greatness of his guru. He loved him and so he longed to be with him. But the influence of such holy association was sure to have its effect. So there began to come a gradual transformation in the life of


Latu. He was fully conscious of his shortcomings, and attributed all his spiritual progress to the Master. One day the Master asked him what God might be doing at the moment. Latu naturally pleaded ignorance. When thereafter the Master remarked that God was passing a camel through the eye of a needle, Latu understood thereby, humility personified as he was, that unfit though he was, God was molding his life to make him a proper recipient of His grace. Many incidents are told of Latu’s power of deep meditation. One day he was meditating sitting on the bank of the Ganga. Then there came the flood-tide, and waters surrounded Latu. But he was unconscious of the external world. The news reached the Master, who at once came and brought back his consciousness by loudly calling him. Another day Latu went to meditate in one of the Shiva temples just after noon. But it was almost evening, and still there was no news of Latu. The Master was anxious about him and sent someone to search for him. It was found that Latu was deeply absorbed in meditation and his whole body was wet with perspiration. On hearing this, Sri Ramakrishna came to the temple and began to fan him. After some time Latu returned to the plane of consciousness and felt greatly embarrassed at seeing the Master fanning him. Sri Ramakrishna, however, removed his embarrassment by his sweet and affectionate words. At this time, Latu was day and night in high spiritual moods. With reference to this, the Master himself once remarked, ‘Latu will not come down, as it were, from his ecstatic condition.’ Latu loved Kirtan - congregational songs to the accompaniment of instrumental music and devotional dance. Even while at the house of Ramchandra, if he would see a Kirtan party, he would run to join it, sometimes forgetful of his daily work. When Latu came to Dakshineswar he got greater opportunities to attend the Kirtan parties. On many occasions he would go into ecstasy while singing with them. A straw best shows which way the wind blows. Sometimes insignificant incidents indicate the direction of the mind of a man. One day Latu, along with others, was playing an indoor game called ‘Golokdam’, which


term means a heavenly abode called ‘Golok’ or ‘Goloka’. The point aimed at by each player was that his ‘piece’ of Latu reached the destination, he was so beside himself with joy that one could see that he felt as if he had actually reached the salvation of life. When Sri Ramakrishna, who was there, saw the great ecstasy of Latu, he remarked that Latu was so happy because in personal life he was greatly eager to attain liberation. Sri Ramakrishna used to say that frankness is a virtue which one gets as a result of hard tapasya in many previous births; and having frankness, one can expect to realize God very easily. Latu was so very frank that one would wonder at seeing such a childlike trait in him. He would unreservedly speak of his struggle with the flesh to the Master and receive instructions from him. Once the Master told Latu, ‘Don’t forget Him throughout the day or night.’ And of all forms of spiritual practices, it seems Latu laid the greatest stress on repeating the sacred Name. This was also his instruction to others who came to him for guidance in later day. To a devotee who asked him, ‘How can we have self-surrender to God whom we have never seen’, Latu Maharaj said in his inimitable simple way, ‘It does not matter if you do not know Him. You know His name. Just take His name, and you will progress spiritually. What do they do in an office? Without having seen or known the officer, one sends an application addressed to his name. Similarly send your application to God, and you will receive His grace.’ With all his longing, Latu’s chief endeavor in life was to serve the Master. Once he said in reply to one who questioned him as to how the disciples of the Master got time for worship when they were so much devoted to his service: ‘Well, service to him was our greatest worship and meditation.’ Latu accompanied the Master as a devoted attendant when he was removed for treatment to Shyampukur and thence to Cossipore and served him till the last moment. Latu was one of the chosen twelve to whom the Master gave the gerua cloth as a symbol of detachment. Afterwards when


the actual rite for sannyasa was performed and the family name had to be changed, Latu was named Swami Adbhutananda, perhaps because the life of Latu Maharaj was so wonderful-Adbhuta-in every respect. After the passing away of the Master Latu Maharaj accompanied the Holy Mother to Vrindavan and stayed there for a short period. His love and reverence for the Holy Mother was next to that for the Master, if not equal. The Holy Mother also looked upon him exactly as her own child. At Dakshineswar when she had to pass through hard days of work, Latu had been her devoted assistant. Brought up in a village atmosphere, she was very shy and would not talk with anyone outside a limited group. But as Latu was very young and had a childlike attitude towards her, she was free with him. The depth of love and devotion of Latu Maharaj to the Holy Mother throughout his life was amazing and beggar description. After his return from Vrindavan, he joined the Baranagore monastery. At Baranagore, Latu Maharaj, along with other brother disciples, passed continuously one year and a half in hard spiritual practices, in one or other form of which he would spend the whole night, and in the daytime he would a short sleep. That became his habit for the whole life. Even if ill, he would sit for meditation in the evening. At Barangore he was at one time very ill with pneumonia. He was too weak to rise. But he would insist that he should be helped to sit in the evening. When reminded that the doctor had forbidden him to do so, he would show great resentment and say, ‘what does the doctor know? It is his (the Master’s) direction, and it must be done.’ He would be so engrossed in spiritual practices and always so much in spiritual mood that he could not stick to any regular time for food and drink. Because of this characteristic, sometimes food had to be sent to his room at the Baranagore monastery. But on many days the food that was sent in the morning remained untouched till at night. Latu Maharaj had no idea that he had not taken any meal. At night when others retired, Latu Maharaj would lie in his bed feigning sleep. When others were fast asleep, he would quietly rise and tell his beads. Once a funny incident happened on one of such occasions. While


Latu Maharaj was telling his beads, a little sound was made, Swami Saradananda thought that a rat had come into the room and he kindled a light to drive it away. At this, all found out the trick that Latu Maharaj was playing on them, and began to poke fun at him. Latu Maharaj had his own way of living and he could not conform to the routine life of an institution. Because of this he would afterwards live mostly outside the monastery with occasional short stays at the Alambazar or Belur Math. Swami Vivekananda once made it a rule that everyone should get up in the early hours of the morning, with the ringing of a bell, and meditate. The next day Latu Maharaj was on his way to leave the Math. Swamiji heard the news and asked Latu Maharaj what the matter was with him. Latu Maharaj said, ‘My mind has not reached such a stage that it can with the ringing of your bell be ready for meditation. I shall not be able to sit for meditation at your appointed hours.’ Swamiji understood the whole situation and waived the rule in favor of Latu Maharaj. Sometimes Latu Maharaj stayed at the house of devotees, sometimes in a room at the Basumati Press belonging to Upendra Nath Mukherjee, a lay disciple of the Master, and very often he lived on the bank of the Ganga without any fixed shelter. The daytime he would pass at one bathing ghat, the night time he would spend at some other ghat with or without any roof. The policeman, who kept watch, came to know him and so would not object to his remaining there at night. One night, while it was raining, Latu Maharaj took shelter in an empty railway wagon that stood nearby. Soon the engine came and dragged the wagon to a great distance before Latu Maharaj was conscious of what had happened. He then got down and walked back to his accustomed spot. About his food Latu Maharaj was not all particular. Sometimes a little quantity of gram soaked in water would serve for him the purpose of a meal. He lived on a plane where physical needs do not very much trouble a man, nor can the outside world disturb the internal peace. When asked


how he could stay in a room in a printing press where there was so much noise, Latu Maharaj replied that he did not feel much difficulty. The fact is that the main source of strength of Latu Maharaj was his dependence on the Master. He would always think that the Master would supply him with everything that he needed or was good for him. Later, he would say to those who sought guidance from him, ‘Your dependence on God is so very feeble. If you do not get a result according to your own liking, in two days you give up God and follow your own plan as if you are wise than He. Real self-surrender means that you will not waver in your faith even in the face of great losses.’ There was nothing in the world which could tempt Latu Maharaj away from his faith in God and the guru. It is very difficult to trace the chronological events of Latu Maharaj’s life: first because there were no events in his life accepting the fact that it was one long stillness of prayer, and secondly because now and then he was out of touch with all. Latu Maharaj made a point to live within a few miles of Dakshineswar, the great seat of the Master’s sadhana. Rarely did he go further away. In 1895 he once went to Puri; in 1903 he was again at the holy city for about a month; and in the same year he visited some places of Northern India like Varanasi, Allahabad, and Vrindavan. Swamiji took him in his party on his tour in Kashmir and Rajputana. Excepting these occasions Latu Maharaj lived mostly in Calcutta or near about. Latu Maharaj prayed to Jagannath at Puri that he might be vouchsafed two boons - first that he could engage himself in spiritual practices without having a wandering habit and second, he might have a good digestion. When asked why he asked for the second boon which seemed so strange, Latu Maharaj remarked: ‘Well, it is very important in monastic life. There is no knowing what kind of food a monk will get. If he has got a good stomach, he can take any food that chance may bring, and, thus preserving his health, can devote his energy to spiritual practices.’


Towards the end of 1898, when Ramchandra Datta was on his deathbed, Latu Maharaj was by his side. For more than three weeks he incessantly nursed his old master. He took upon himself the main brunt of looking after the patient. With the same earnestness did he nurse the wife of Ramchandra Datta, whom he regarded as his mother, in her dying moments. For about a month or so, with anxious care and unsparingly, Latu Maharaj attended her. It was only when she passed away that he left the house. Though Latu Maharaj was never closely connected with the works of the Ramakrishna Mission, his love for his brother disciples, especially for the leader, whom he would call ‘Loren’ or ‘Loren-bhai’, brother Naren, in his distorted pronunciation, was very great. Latu Maharaj could not identify himself with the works started by Swamiji as they caused distraction to the inner flow of his spiritual life. But he had great faith in one whom the Master praised so much. He used to say, ‘I am ready to take hundreds of births if I can have the companionship of ‘Loren-bhai.’ Swamiji infinitely reciprocated the love of Latu Maharaj. When on his return to Calcutta from the West, he was given a splendid reception and everybody was eager to see and talk with him, Swamiji made anxious inquiry about Latu Maharaj; and when the latter came, he took him by his hand and asked why he had not come for so long. Latu Maharaj with his characteristic frankness said that he was afraid he would be a misfit in the aristocratic company where the Swami was. At this Swamiji very affectionately said, ‘You are ever my Latu-bhai (brother Latu) and I am your Loren-bhai’, and dragged Latu Maharaj with him to take their meals together. The childlike simplicity and open-mindedness of Latu Maharaj made a special appeal to his brother disciples. Sometimes they would poke fun at him taking advantage of his simplicity. But they also had a deep regard for his deep spirituality. Swami Vivekananda used to say, ‘Our Master was original, and every one of his disciples also is original. Look at Latu. Born and brought up in a poor family, he has attained to level of spirituality which is the despair of many. We came


with education. This was a great advantage. When we felt depressed or life became monotonous, we could try to get inspiration from books. But Latu had no so opportunity for diversion. Yet simply through one-pointed devotion he has made his life exalted. This speaks of his great latent spirituality. Now and then Swamiji would lovingly address Latu Maharaj as ‘Plato’ distorting the name ‘Lato’ as pronounced by the Master, into that famous Greek name bearing indirect testimony to the wisdom the latter had attained. Sometimes the happy relationship between Latu Maharaj and his brother disciples would give rise to very enjoyable situations. Once in Kashmir, Swami Vivekananda, after visiting a temple, remarked that it was two or three thousand years old. At this Latu Maharaj questioned how he could come to such a strange conclusion. Swamiji was in a fix and replied, ‘It is very difficult to explain the reasons for my conclusion to you. It would be possible if you had got modern education.’ Latu Maharaj, instead of feeling abashed at this, said, ‘Well, such is your wisdom that you cannot enlighten an illiterate person like myself.’ The reply threw all into roaring laughter. In 1903 Latu Maharaj was persuaded to take up his residence at the house of the great devotee Balaram Bose. There he stayed for about nine years till 1912. A very unusual thing for Latu Maharaj! When he requests for staying there came to Latu Maharaj, he at first refused on the ground that there was no regularity about his time of taking food and therefore he did not like to inconvenience anyone. But the members of the family earnestly reiterated their request saying that it would be rather a blessing than any inconvenience if he put up at their house and that arrangements would be made so that he might live in any way he liked. Even at this place where everyone was eager to give him all comforts, Latu Maharaj lived a very stern ascetic life. An eyewitness describes him as he was seen at Balaram Babu’s place: ‘Latu Maharaj was a person of few words. He was also a person of few needs. His room bore witness to it. It lay immediately to the right of the house-entrance. The door was nearly always open, and as one passed, one could see the large empty


space with a small thin mat on the floor, at the far end a low table for a bed, on one side a few half-dead embers in an open hearth and on them a pot of tea. I suspect that the pot of tea represented the whole of Latu Maharaj’s concession to the body.’ In this room Latu Maharaj passed the whole day almost alone, absorbed in his own thoughts. One in the mornings and then evenings he would be found talking with persons who approached him for the solution of their spiritual problems. Outwardly Latu Maharaj was stern and at times he would not reply though asked questions repeatedly. But when in a mood to talk and mix with people, he was amazingly free and sociable. He had not the least trace of egotism in him. Beneath the rough exterior he hid a very soft heart. Those who were fortunate in having access to that found in him a friend, philosopher, and guide. Even little boys were very free with him. They played with him, scrambled over his shoulders, and found in him a delightful companion. Persons who were lowly and despised found a sympathetic response from his kindly heart. Once asked how he could associate himself with them, he replied, ‘They are at least more sincere.’ Once a man, tipsy with drink, came to him at midnight with some articles of food and requested that Latu Maharaj must accept them. For after that he himself could partake of them as sacramental food. A stern ascetic like Latu Maharaj quietly submitted to the importunities of this vicious character, and the man went away satisfied, all the way singing merry songs. When asked how he could stand that situation, Latu Maharaj said, ‘They want a little sympathy, why should one grudge that?’ Another day a devotee came to him drenched with rain. Latu Maharaj at once gave him his own clothes to put on. The devotee got alarmed at the very suggestion of wearing the personal clothes of the much-revered Latu Maharaj and also because they were ochre clothes, which it was sacrilegious for a layman to put on. But Latu Maharaj persuaded him to wear them as otherwise he might fall ill and fail to attend the office - a very gloomy prospect for a poor man like him.


Latu Maharaj maintained an outward sternness perhaps to protect himself against the intrusion of people. But however, stern he might be externally in order to keep off people or however much he might be trying to hide his spiritual fire; people began to be attracted by his wonderful personality. Though he had no academic education whatsoever, he could solve the intricate points of philosophy or the complex problems of spiritual life in such an easy way that one felt he saw the solutions as tangibly as one sees material objects. Once there came two Western ladies to Latu Maharaj. They belonged to an atheist society. As much, they believed in humanitarian works but not in God. ‘Why should you do good to others?’ asked Latu Maharaj in the course of the conversation with them, ‘Where lies your interest in that? If you don’t believe in the existence of God, there will always remain a flaw in your argument. Humanitarian work is a matter that concerns the good of society. You cannot prove that it will do good to yourself. So after sometime you will get tired of doing the work that does not serve your self-interest. On the contrary, if you believe in God there will be a perennial source of interest, for the same God resides in others as in you.’ ‘But can you prove that the one God resides in many?’ asked one of the ladies. ‘Why not?’ came the prompt reply, ‘but it is a subjective experience. Love cannot be explained to another. Only one who loves understands it and also the one who is loved. The same is the case with God. He knows and the one whom He blesses knows. For others He will ever remain an enigma.’ ‘How can it be possible that I am the Soul, I being finite and the Soul being infinite?’ asked a devotee. ‘Where is the difficulty?’ replied Latu Maharaj who had the perception of the truth as clear as daylight, ‘Have you not seen jasmine flowers? The petals of those flowers are very small. But even those petals, dew-drops on them, reflect the infinite sky. Do they not? In the same way though the grace of God this limited self can reflect the Infinite.’


‘How can an aspirant grasp Brahman which is infinite?’ asked a devotee with a philosophical bent of mind. ‘You have heard music’, said the monk who was quite innocent of any knowledge of academic philosophy, ‘you have seen how the strings of a Sitar bring out songs. In the same way the life of a devotee expresses Divinity.’ Once, at Baranagore Math, Swami Turiyananda, who had very deep knowledge of scriptures, was saying that God was all kind and was above any sense of hatred or partiality. At this Latu Maharaj ejaculated, ‘nice indeed! You are defending God as if He is a child.’ ‘If God is not impartial’, said Swami Turiyananda, ‘is He then a despot like the Czar of Russia, doing whatever He likes according to His caprice?’ ‘All right, you may defend your God if you please’, replied Latu Maharaj, ‘but this you should not forget that He is also the power behind the despotism of a Czar.’ Though he had no book-learning, Latu Maharaj could instinctively see the inner significance of scriptures because of his spiritual realizations. Once a pundit was reading the Kathopanishad. When he read the following mantra: ‘The Purusha of the size of a thumb, the inner soul, dwells always in the heart of beings. One should separate Him from the body with patience as the stalk from a grass’, Latu Maharaj was overjoyed and exclaimed, ‘Just the thing’, as if he was giving out his own inner experience of life. Though he himself could not read, he liked to hear scriptures read out to him. Once at the dead of night - to him day and night had no difference he awakened a young monk who slept in his room and asked him to read out the Gita to him. The young monk did so in compliance with his wish. Latu Maharaj talked of high spiritual things when the mood for that came, but he was too humble to think that he was doing any spiritual good to anybody. Though by coming into contact with him many lives were changed, he did not consciously make any disciple. He used to say that only those persons who were born with a mission like Swami Vivekananda were entitled to make disciples or preach religion. He had a


contempt for those who talked or lectured on religion without directing their energies to building up their own character. He used to say that the so-called preachers go out to seek people to listen to them, but if they realize the Truth, people of their own accord would flock around them for spiritual help. Whenever he felt that his words might be interpreted as if he had taken the role of a teacher, he would rebuke himself muttering half-audible words. Thus, Latu Maharaj was an unconscious teacher, but the effect of his unintentional teaching was tremendous on the people who came to him. In 1912 Latu Maharaj went to Varanasi to pass his last days in that holy city. He stayed at various places there. But wherever he lived he radiated the highest spirituality and people circled round him. Even in advanced age he passed the whole night in spiritual practices. Sometimes in the daytime also, when he lay on his bed covered with a sheet and people took him to be sleeping, on careful observation he would be found to be absorbed in his own spiritual thoughts. During the last period of his life, he would not like very much to mix with people. But if he would talk, he would talk only of higher things. He would grow warm enthusiasm while talking about the Master and Swamiji. Hard spiritual practices and total indifference to bodily needs told upon his once strong health. The last two or three years of his life he suffered from dyspepsia and various other accompanying ailments. Still, he remined as negligent about his health as ever, and one would very often hear him say, ‘It is a great botheration to have a body.’ In the last year of his life, he had a blister on his leg which developed gangrene. In the course of the last four days before his passing away, he was daily operated upon twice or thrice. But the wonder of wonders was, he did not show the least indication of any feeling of pain. It was as if the operation was done on some external thing. His mind soared high up, and even the body-idea was forgotten. Later, he would always remain indrawn. As the last moment approached, he became completely self-absorbed. His gaze remained fixed between his brows, and his thoughts were withdrawn from the external


world. Wide awake, but oblivious of his surroundings, he stood midway between the conscious and the superconscious planes, till at last the great soul was completely freed from the encagement of the body. Latu Maharaj entered into Mahasamdhi on 24 April 1920. Those who witnessed the scene say that even after the passing, in his face there was such an expression of calm joy and compassion that they could not distinguish between death and the living state. Everyone was struck by that unique sight. A wonderful life culminated in a wonderful death. Indeed, Sri Ramakrishna was a unique alchemist. Out of dust he could create gold. He transformed an orphan boy of lowly birth, wandering in the streets of Calcutta for a means of livelihood, into a saint who commanded the spontaneous veneration of one and all. It is said that when Latu Maharaj passed away, Hindus, Mohammedans - all, irrespective of caste or creed - rushed to pay homage to that great soul. Such was his influence! TEACHINGS OF SWAMI ADBHUTANANDA

Ah, the folly! Can one force the non-dualist’s attitude on one’s mind? It is a slow growth. The Master used to say, ‘When the fruit grows big, the flowers drop itself.’ Just imagine what true non-dualism means - the Master could not walk on grassy plots! Such becomes the selfidentification with all things when one realizes the Atman-Brahman. But one must keep sharpened one’s power of discrimination between the real and the unreal, between the one and the many from the very beginning of one’s sadhana. The Master would often say, ‘Don’t be fascinated by the world, but go deeper and know the Architect.’ They talk of God. Their talks are mere lip service. Do they really believe in Him? The Lord deals out according to one’s karma. Everyone gets his due. Really, there is no cause for worries. But man does not believe in God. So, he demands more than his due. This lies at the root of all his troubles and


worries. Believers remain satisfied. They depend on the Lord and enjoy contentment. One should avoid the company of the non-believers. They themselves suffer and pass on their discontent to others. What is the use of prayer and meditation if you have no dependence on Him? Everything else is useless of you lack in this. The Master used to say, ‘A sadhu renounces all, but the idea that he is a sadhu dogs him. He gets angry at trifling slights: “Am I inferior to him?”’ You are too eager for getting respects, which are the worst enemies of sadhus. If you care for spirituality, fling away all hankering after respects. A man of the world slaves for money. But nobody wants to do that for the Lord’s sake, though there are no expenses to incur. Blessed is he who slaves for the Lord. Apply whatever powers you may have been endowed with to good purposes and see that you do not harm anybody. Who is more blessed than he who has dedicated his life to the service of others, who has obliterated all distinctions between mine and yours, and whose heart bleeds for others’ sufferings? So hopelessly selfish we have become that we do not feel for people in difficulty, are busy with finding others’ weak points, and spreading rumors, and are envious of others’ happiness and prosperity. With such traits what else but misery can we expect to befall us? God is mightily pleased with those who engage themselves in serving others without an ulterior motive. What shall I tell you - when you have already spent good fifty years of your life only to decide whether God is or is not, whether He has form or is formless? When will you undertake japa and meditation? He who fears and doubts cannot make any progress either in the spiritual or worldly sphere. The mind is cramped. He alone is a hero, he alone attains greatness, who moves forward to realize the truth without caring whether the world is real or not. If you are running temperature, everything tastes bitter, you do not like sweets. Even so, as long as you have the desire to enjoy worldly things, you can have no taste for prayer, meditation, fasts, and vigils - all taste


bitter. When this worldly fever subsides, prayer, meditation, and the like taste sweet. The mind settles quickly on them. Temptation cannot sweep you off your feet. Never talk ill of anybody, be he a devotee, a monk, or an ordinary householder, nor despise any for a wrong act. After all, everyone is a child of the Lord. Who knows today’s sinning will not make him a saint tomorrow? Other acts do not count so much as a moment’s love for the Lord. Blessed is he who has loved Him even for a moment. Saint or sinner, the Lord loves all. It is a great sin to find fault with others. You will invariably find that it is such people as never do a good act themselves who easily see defects in others and energetically spread rumors. Do you ask what happens if one believes in God and loves Him? He is rendered innocuous, he cannot do harm to anyone, this brings peace to himself and to society. There is on overhead; commit wrong, and you suffer. As long as you suffer from a sense of want, you cannot sincerely call on God. And man has no end of wants. This sense is so peculiar that the more you think of it, the more intense and wider it becomes. Therefore, it is that those who want God should tread the path of renunciation. If there is anything really difficult, it is to practice religion. Without the Lord’s grace, progress is impossible. A harsh word upset our mind. To practice religion with such a mind! Nowadays ‘religion’ is heard dropping from every lip. It is a rage. How many, I say, how many really want religion? With almost all it is soppy sentimentalism. But even an imitation religion, as they say, is good. That is all. It is better to continue calling on the Lord devotedly than to know, speak, and preach thousand and one religious chants and shibboleths. There are high-sounding words in all scriptures. Of what avail are they? One is to realize their truths in one’s life. The wicked mind cannot rest for a second. It is on a haphazard run in all directions. One must keep a vigilant watch over its workings, over where


it goes. For this the company of holy men is very important, and prayer and meditation. Then alone does the mind slowly quiet down. The garden and its produce belong to the master. The gardener does not own anything. Everything is belonging to the master. But he offers the master’s thing to him with great devotion and humility. Everything of the world belongs to the Lord, we are His gardeners. ‘Thou art my Lord, and I am Thy servant’- actuated by this attitude, and with faith and devotion, we offer the Lord’s things to Him. This is Dasya-Bhakti. Cast off hypocrisy. It is because of this that you do not progress. If your devotion is genuine, there is no reason why you should not progress and realize God. When you worship, what is needed is fixing of the mind on the Deity. What do we mean by worship? To give God’s things to Him. He commits theft who takes food without offering it to Him. There’s the presence of God when worship is attended by faith and devotion or else, He takes to His heels. Devotion without and duplicity within - that is too dangerous. The Lord is far, far away from such a mind. The minds of such people are full of selfish motives. So, they make no spiritual progress. ‘I am and my chosen Deity is - there is naught else besides’- when this attitude comes, the mind becomes purified. This is meditation.


SWAMI ADVAITANANDA

Swami Advaitananda in his pre-monastic days was known as Gopal Chandra Ghosh. He was the oldest of the monastic disciples of Sri Ramakrishna, being older than even the Master by a few years. Besides, as there were two Gopals, Sri Ramakrishna would address Swami Advaitananda as ‘aged Gopal’ while others would call him Gopalda or Gopal the elder brother. His father was Govardhan Ghosh, and he was born in a village called Jagadal in 24 Parganas, but usually he lived in Sinthi near Calcutta. Gopal was an employee in a shop in Chinabazar, Calcutta, belonging to Beni Pal of Sinthi. Beni Pal was a devout Brahmo, and in the religious celebrations which he performed at his place, the Master would also occasionally be present on invitation. Perhaps it was at these meetings that Gopal first met the Master. Gopalda was a married man. At the death of his wife, he received such a great shock that he did not know what to do. A friend, who was a devotee of the Master, asked him to go to Dakshineswar, which he did he find anything very remarkable in the Master. But his friend insisted on his repeating the visit, for holy men do not often reveal themselves at


once. Gopalda complied, and this time he has caught in the love of Sri Ramakrishna. As he began to frequent Dakshineswar, the overwhelming burden of his grief was completely removed. The Master’s simple explanation of the unreality of the world made a deep impression on his mind, and began seriously to think of giving up the world in search of God. Ultimately, he renounced the world and devoted himself heart and soul to the service of the Master in his last illness. He was very neat and clean and the embodiment of method and orderliness. These traits in him received great appreciation from the Master. His service to the Holy Mother was equally wholehearted. As the bashful Mother did not talk with anyone except the old Gopalda, the young Latu, and a few others, Gopalda used to attend to her needs. One day Gopalda expressed a desire to the Master to distribute some ochre cloths and rosaries to monks. On this the Master replied, ‘You won’t find better monk than these young boys here. You may give your cloths and rosaries to them.’ Thereupon Gopalda placed a bundle of saffron cloths before the Master, who distributed them among his young disciples. (Narendra, Rakhal, Baburam, Niranjan, Yogin, Tarak, Latu, Kali, Sharat, Shashi, and Gopalda) Thus was sown the seed of the future Ramakrishna Order. At the Cossipore garden-house Swami Vivekananda, then Narendranath, when sitting one day in meditation was lost to outer consciousness. His mind flew beyond the realm of relative consciousness and was merged in the Absolute. Gopalda became terrified and rushed to the Master to report that Narendra was dead. The Master understood that it was a case of Nirvilalpa Samadhi and assured Gopalda accordingly. After some time, Narendra regained normal consciousness. After the passing away of the Master, Gopalda had no home to go to. So, with himself and Shivananda as the first inmates, was started the monastery at Baranagore. After staying in this monastery for a few years, he went to Varanasi where he practiced austerities for about five years. One who had the privilege of staying with him at Varanasi says that his


regularity in spiritual practices was wonderful. Very early in the morning, even the severe wintry days of Varanasi, he would get up and go to the Ganga for a bath. From there he would return shivering with cold but his mind absorbed in reciting some Sanskrit hymns. The programmed of the whole day was fixed, and he would follow it without the least deviation for days, months, and years. At that holy city he lived on Madhukari, small quantities of cooked food collected from various houses, so that it might not be taxing to a single individual. Adjacent to a place where an image of Shiva was installed, he occupied a small room, but how neat and clean that small room was! Everything kept in its proper place, the room at once gave indication of great taste and orderliness. His steadiness would cause wonder to those who watched him. He was quite indifferent to worldly sights and sounds, and followed his own tenor of life in the contemplation of the divinity from day to day without any break. When Swamiji returned to India and organized the Ramakrishna Brotherhood, Swami Advaitananda, the name he was given when he became a monk, returned to the Math at Alambazar. Afterwards he stayed mainly at the new monastery at Belur Math, where he looked after the management of various affairs of the monastery, especially the garden work. But all work he undertook or supervised had to be done very systematically and with scrupulous care. The young novitiates could hardly rise to his standard of perfection as regards work and for that reason they had a very hard time with him. Many of them would receive mild rebuke from old Gopalda, but they would take his criticisms more as a token of affection than as any indication of bitterness. Gopalda, however, would say later, ‘The Master has shown me that it is He who is manifested through all. Then whom to blame or whom to criticize?’ After this experience, Gopalda ceased from finding fault with anyone however great might be the latter’s errors. Even in his old age he was self-supporting. He would not like anybody to take the trouble of attending to his personal needs.


Being the oldest in age, he was looked upon with affectionate regard by all his brother disciples. But they also enjoyed making fun with him. Swamiji composed a comical verse in order to tease Gopalda, but that really indicated in what great esteem Gopalda was held by all. Old Gopalda, too, had his moments of humor, though it might be at the cost of others. Swami Vijnanananda related one such incident. ‘He (Gopalda) and Nityananda Maharaj were staying at Belur Math with several Monks and brahmacharins. Calling them, Swami Nityananda said, “Well, look here, come and dig up this plot of land. I shall raise brinjals and potatoes here.” They started digging up. Seeing this Gopalda said, “Oh, what a hard labor they are put to! Come away, all of you boys. Should they be made to work so hard?” Gopalda took them along with him. Then he told them quietly, “You brothers dig up this plot for flower beds.” The soil of the latter plot was harder than the first. Swamiji and other monks had a hearty laugh when they heard Gopalda saying that. ‘I am, therefore, always reminded of Gopalda when someone takes pity on another and wants to make him comfortable.’ In those days of hard work, the monks knew how to lighten the burden through humor. But Gopalda was not always successful with all. He disliked tea, while Swami Subodhananda cherished it. Goplada warned all that if the drank tea, it would lead to dysentery. But Swami Subodhananda asserted emphatically that each drop of tea in the cup would produce a drop of blood. After his return to the monastery. Gopalda’s special duty was to look to the levelling of the newly purchased land at Belur and the repair of the old structures there. The land has been in use for repair of steamers and was hence full of pits and canals. All this meant strenuous work. When the monastery became fully established there, Gopalda willingly took up the duty of looking after the comforts of the monks and producing vegetables. For offering to the Master. Gopalda made strenuous efforts to mold his life and example of the Master, and would sometimes express disappointment that he fell so short


of the ideal. But this feeling of disappointment indicated only his real spiritual height. Because of his age, Gopalda did not engage himself in any public activity, philanthropic, missionary, or otherwise, so that his monastic life was quite uneventful. But so long as he was in the physical body, he definitely set an example to all, and he was the source of inspiration to many. His uniform steadfastness in sadhana till the last days of his life elicited admiration, if not reverence, even from his brother disciples. His love for truth was wonderful. He heard the Master say that one should not twist truth even to make fun. Gopalda obeyed this instruction in letter and spirit and insisted on others doing likewise. He travelled extensively and visited, at one time of other in his life, sacred places like Kedarnath, Badrinarayan, and Hardwar in the north, Dwarka in the west, and Rameswaram and other places in the south. He kept sound health till the good old age he lived to. After suffering for some time from stomach trouble, he passed away on 28 December 1909, at the age of eighty-one.


SWAMI TURIYANANDA

Each disciple of Sri Ramakrishna was great in his own way. Each had superb qualities which dazzled those who witnessed them. Swami Turiyananda was a blazing fire of renunciation. To be near him was to feel the warmth of his highly developed spiritual personality. From his very boyhood till the end, his life was a great fight: in the beginning it was a fight for his own spiritual evolution; during the latter days, to make those who came within the orbit of his influence better. He was as if ceaselessly alert and vigilant so that everything in and around him might be the expression of the highest spirituality. Yet it meant no struggle to him; it became so very natural with him. His early life was modelled on the teachings of Shankaracharya, and those who witnessed him in later days could witness in him a living example of a Jivanmukta (free while still in the body). Swami Vivekananda once, in his characteristic way of presenting a point of view in the most emphatic and impressive manner, even belittling himself and his own achievements, said to his American disciples, ‘In me you have seen the expression of kshatriya power; I am going to send to you one who is the embodiment of


Brahminical qualities, who represents what a brahmin or the highest spiritual evolution of man is.’ And he sent Swami Turiyananda. Swami Turiyananda was born in a brahmin family in North Calcutta on 3 January 1863. His family name was Harinath Chattopadhya. His lost his parents while very young, and was brought up by his elder brother. He could not prosecute his studies beyond the Entrance class as his interest lay in another direction. From a very young age, he would live like an orthodox brahmacharin - bathing three times a day, cooking his own meal, and reciting whole of the Gita before daybreak. He was a deep student of the Upanishads, and the works of Shankaracharya. His mind was bend towards the Advaita Vedanta, and he strove sincerely to live up to that ideal. The story goes that once when he was bathing in the Ganga, something looking like a crocodile popped up in the river, and a shout was raised around asking the bathers to run up. His first reaction was to leave the water and come to the bank for the safety of his life. At once the thought occurred to him: ‘If I am one with Brahman, why should I fear? I am not a body. And if I am Spirit, what fear have I from anything in the whole world, much less from a crocodile?’ This idea so much stirred his mind that he did not leave the spot. Bystanders thought he was foolishly courting death. But they did not know that he was testing his faith in Advaita philosophy. The purpose of his life was to be a Jivanmukta. He himself once said that the first time he read the verse in which it is said that life is meant for the realization of Jivanmukti, he leaped in joy. For that was the ideal he was aiming at. The scriptures say that if a man is sincere, he meets with his spiritual guide unsought for. Harinath also met with his Master unexpectedly and without knowing it. He was then a boy of thirteen or fourteen. He heard that a Paramahamsa (a sannyasin of the highest order- a realized soul) would come to a neighboring house. Out of curiosity, he went to see the Paramahmasa. This Paramahamsa was no other than Sri Ramakrishna, who afterwards played a great part in molding his life. To give the version of Swami Turiyananda himself: ‘A hackney carriage with two


passengers in it stopped in front of the house. A thin emaciated man got down from the carriage supported by another man. He appeared to be totally unconscious of the world. When I got a better view of him, I saw that his face was surrounded with a halo. The thought immediately flashed in my mind, “I have read about Shukadeva in scriptures. Is this then a man like him?” Supported by his attendant, he walked to the room with a tottering gait. Regaining a little consciousness of the world, he saw a large portrait of Kali on the wall and bowed his head before it. Then he sang a song depicting the oneness f of Krishna and Kali which thrilled the audience.’ He met Sri Ramakrishna again at Dakshineswar two or three years afterwards. Soon he became passionately devoted to the Master and began to see him as often as he could. The Master asked Harinath to come to him avoiding holidays, when there was a large assemblage of visitors. Thus, Harinath found an opportunity to talk very freely an intimately with the Master, who was rather surprised to know from young Hari that his favourite book was the Rama Gita, an Advaita treatise. In the course of conversation one day, Harinath told the Master that he found great inspiration while he visited Dakshineswar, whereas in Calcutta he felt miserable. To this appealing statement of the young disciple, the Master said, ‘Why, you are a servant of the Lord Hari, and His servant can never be unhappy anywhere.’ ‘But I don’t know that I am His servant’, remonstrated the boy. The Master reiterated, ‘Truth does not depend upon anybody’s knowledge of it. Whether you know it or not, you are a servant of the Lord.’ This reassured Harinath. From an early age Harinath had an abhorrence of women. He did not allow even little girls to come near him. One day in answer to an inquiry from the Master on this subject he said, ‘Oh, I cannot bear them.’ ‘You talk like a fool!’ said the Master reprovingly, ‘Look down upon women! What for? They are the manifestation of the Divine Mother. Bow down to them as to your mother and hold them in respect. That is only way to escape their influence. The more you hate them, the more you will fall into


their snare.’ These fiery words penetrated into the heart of Harinath and changed his entire outlook on women. One day Harinath asked the Master how one could completely rid of the sex-idea. The reply was that one had no need to think in that line. One should try to think of positive ideas, of God, then only one would be free from any sex-idea. This was a new revelation to the young boy. We have said that Harinath was a deep student of Vedanta and tried to mold his life according to its teachings. Once he happened to keep away from Dakshineswar for a longer time than usual. When he came next, the Master told Harinath, ‘They say you are studying and meditating on Vedanta nowadays. It is good. But what does the Vedanta philosophy teach? “Brahman alone is real and everything else is unreal” isn’t that its substance, or is there anything more? Then why don’t you give up the unreal and cling to the Real?’ These words pinpointed the main theme or Vedanta in such a clear way that they turned the thoughts of Harinath in a new fruitful direction. A few days later, the Master went to Calcutta and sent for Harinath; when he came, he found the Master in a state of semi-consciousness. ‘It is not easy to see the world of phenomena as unreal’, the Master began addressing the assembled devotees, ‘This knowledge is impossible without the special grace of God. Mere personal effort id powerless to confer this realization. A man is after all a tiny creature with very limited powers. What an infinitesimal part of truth can be grasp by himself!’ Harinath felt as if these words were directed to him, for he had been straining every nerve to attain illumination by personal effort. The Master then sang a song eulogizing the miraculous power of divine grace and decrying egotism. Tears flowed down his cheeks, literally wetting the ground. Harinath was deeply moved. He too burst into tears. After that, he learnt to surrender himself at the feet of the Lord. Sri Ramakrishna loved Harinath dearly. In order to induce Harinath to be more regular in his visits to Dakshineswar, the Master appealed to him thus in a voice choked with emotion, ‘Why don’t you come here? I love to


see you all because I know that you are God’s special favorites. Otherwise, what can I expect from you? You have not the means to offer me a pice worth of presents, nor have you a tattered mat to spread on the floor when I go to your house. And still, I love you so much. Don’t fail to come here (meaning himself), for this is where you will receive everything. If you are sure to find God elsewhere, so there by all means. What I want is that you realize God, transcend the misery of the world, and enjoy divine beatitude. Anyhow try to attain it in this life. But the Mother tells me that you will realize God without any effort if you come here. So, I insist upon your coming.’ As he spoke thus, he actually wept. It is needless to say Harinath also had extraordinary veneration for the Master. In later days when he was severely suffering from various physical ailments, he once remarked that the bliss he had got in the company of the Master more than compensated for all the suffering he had in his whole life. After the passing away of the Master when the monastery at Baranagore had been established, Harinath joined it in 1887 at the age of twenty-four years. After formally accepting the vow of lifelong monasticism, his new name became Swami Turiyananda, though he was popularly known as Hari Maharaj. The sannyasin’s love for freedom made some of these young monks feel that they must go out in the wide world depending solely on God and gathering spiritual experiences from the hardships and difficulties of life. Hari Maharaj also left the shelter of the Baranagore Math and for years travelled on foot from one holy city to another, practicing the most rigorous austerities. He had often scarcely the barest necessities about him - at times not even a blanket. The severe winter of Northern India he passed with a cotton chaddar, and for his food he had what chance might bring. He travelled through the Uttar Pradesh and stayed for some time at Rajpur, near Dehradun, and it was here that an astrologer told him he would soon meet one whom he most liked. In a day or two he, to his great surprise, met Swami Vivekananda, who was accompanied by some other gurubhais. Hari Maharaj joined the party and practiced tapasya at


Rishikesh, the famous retreat of monks, a few miles above Hardwar. After Swamiji had recovered from the severe fever which he had here, he went to Meerut to recoup his health, and from there to Delhi. Hari Maharaj was also one of the parties which accompanied him. Hari Maharaj again travelled with him from Bombay to Abu Road, when the latter was about to depart for America in 1893. He used to say later that from the radiant form of Swamiji he could at once judge that he had perfected himself in sadhana and was ready to impart to mankind the results of his experience. At Abu Road, Swami told Swami Turiyananda, ‘Haribhai (brother Hari, by which affectionate name he called him), I don’t know what I have gained by austerities and spiritual practices, but this I find, that from the experience of travel throughout India my heart has expanded. I feel intensely for the poor, the afflicted, the distressed people of India. Let me see if I can do anything for them.’ Talking of his days of itineracy, he once said, ‘Though I travelled much, I also studied much all along. At Vrindavan I studied a great deal of bhakti scriptures. It is not good to wander much if you do not at the same time continue your sadhana. ‘In the Jagannath temple at Puri, suddenly a sound came to my ears and my heart was filled with great joy so much so that I felt like walking in the air. The sound continued in various strains. My whole mind felt attracted. I then remembered what I had heard of Anahata Dhvani (music of the spheres, as it is called), and I thought it must be that.’ ‘One night at Ujjain I was sleeping under a tree. A storm came and suddenly someone touched me, I got up, and just then a branch fell where I had slept.’ Sometime during this period, he visited the celebrated Himalayan shrines of Kedarnath and Badrinarayan, and he stayed for a period of Srinagar (Garhwal). Talking of the days in Garhwal, Hari Maharaj once said, ‘I was continuously in an exalted mood. My only idea was to realize Him. I not only committed to memory eight Upanishads, but used to be absorbed in


the meaning of each mantra.’ He also prayed to the Divine Mother at this time with eyes soaked in tears that all book-learning might be wiped off from his mind. For the thing which he wanted was God-realization and not dry intellectualism. He was a master of his senses, and once he sat down to meditate, external troubles could not reach the inner sanctuary of his mind. He spoke of this later to a monk of the Ramakrishna Order, ‘When I sit down for meditation, I lock the entrances to my mind, and after that nothing external can reach there. When I unlock them, then only can the mind cognize things outside.’ On another occasion, he remarked to a young sannyasin, ‘Write in big characters on the doors of your mind “No Admission” and no outside disturbance will trouble you during meditation. It is because you allow outside things to disturb you that they have access to your mind.’ During this wandering life one day he had a very interesting experience. While he was travelling from place to place on foot, the thought began to torment him that whereas everyone was doing something in this world, he was living only a useless vagrant life. He could not shake off this thought however much he tried. At last, it became so oppressive to him that he threw himself down under a tree. There he fell asleep and had a dream. He saw himself lying on the ground, and then he saw that his body began to expand in all directions. It went on expanding till it seemed to cover the whole world. Then it occurred to him: ‘See how great you are, you are covering the whole world. Why do you think your life is useless? A grain of Truth will cover a whole world of delusion. Get up, be strong, and realize the Truth. That is the greatest life.’ He awoke and jumped up, and all his doubts vanished. In his travels of some parts of Uttar Pradesh and Punjab, he was accompanied by Swami Brahmananda. At this time Swamiji was writing from America to his brother disciples to meet together and organize themselves into a band for the spread of the message of the Master. At first Swami Turiyananda did not pay any heed to such an idea. His love for a life of tapasya was too great for him to think of anything else. But at long last he responded to the call and returned to the Math which was then at Alambazar.


Swami Vivekananda had a great admiration for this brother disciple. In a letter from America, he wrote in 1895, ‘Whenever I think of the wonderful renunciation of Hari, about his steadiness, of intellect and forbearance, I get a new access of strength!’ Swami Turiyananda’s love for Swamiji also was unique. He would be ready to sacrifice anything for one whom the Master dubbed as the leader of the party. At the Alambazar Math, Hari Maharaj, at the suggestion of Swamiji, took upon himself the task of training the novitiates of the Order. He began to help them in meditation and in studying the scriptures like the Gita, the Upanishads. He began to take public classes as well in North Calcutta. In 1899, when Swami Vivekananda started for America for the second time, he persuaded Swami Turiyananda to accompany him for the American work. Hari Maharaj being a man of meditation was averse to the life of public preaching. So Swamiji found it hard, in the beginning, to persuade him to go to America. When all arguments failed, Swami Vivekananda put his arms round his neck and actually wept like a child as he uttered these words: ‘Dear Haribhai, can’t you see I have been laying down my life, inch by inch, in fulfilling mission of the Master, till I am on the verge of death! Can you merely look on and not come to my help by relieving me of a part of my great burden?’ Swami Turiyananda was overpowered and all his hesitation gave way to the love he bore for the leader. They reached New York via England towards the end of August 1899. Hari Maharaj worked at first at the Vedanta Society of New York, and then he took up additional work at Mont Clair - a country town, about an hour’s journey from New York. Both at New York and Mont Clair the Swami made himself beloved of all. He carried the Indian atmosphere about him wherever he went. When he came to America, he said to Swamiji that platform work was not in his temperament. At this Swamiji told him that if he lived the life, that would be enough. Yes, Swami Turiyananda lived the life. Intensely meditative, gentle, quiet, unconcerned about the things of the world, Swami Turiyananda was a


fire of spirituality. His very presence was a superb inspiration. He did not care much for public work and organization. He was for the few, not for big crowds. His work was with the individual character building. And the greatest scope for work in this line he got when he lived with a group of students in the Shanti Ashrama at California. A Vedanta student of New York, feeling the great need of a Vedanta retreat in the West where the students could live like Indian sannyasins, offered to Swami Vivekananda a homestead in California - 160 acres of free government land situated in San Antone Valley - about forty miles from the nearest railway station and market. The place was naturally very solitary, and in addition it commanded a very beautiful scenery. Far, far away from human habitation, the place stretched out in a rolling, hilly country. Oak, Pine, Chaparral, Chamisal, and Manzanita covered part of the land, the other part was flat and covered with grass. Swamiji accepted the gift and sent Hari Maharaj to open an Ashrama there. From New York Swami Turiyananda went first to Los Angles and stayed there for a short while. Teaching and talking and holding classes, the Swami became popular in Los Angeles. But he could not stay there in spite of the earnest entreaties of the students, for he had come for other work. From Los Angeles he went to San Francisco, and stayed there for some time before he actually started for the Shanti Ashrama. It was at San Francisco that Swamiji had told the students, ‘I have only talked, but I shall send you one of my brethren who will show you how to live what I have taught.’ The students eagerly longed for the coming of the Swami about whom Swami Vivekananda spoke so highly, and naturally they expected much of him. Their expectation was more than fulfilled, for in Swami Turiyananda they found a living embodiment of Vedanta. During his short stay at San Francisco, Hari Maharaj gave a great impetus to the students who had formed themselves into the Vedanta Society of San Francisco. With the first batch of a dozen students, he one day left San Francisco for his future work in the San Antone Valley. When the party arrived


there, many initial difficulties presented themselves. Except for one old log cabin, there was no shelter. Water had to be brought from a long distance. But the enthusiasm of the students at the prospect of a future Ashrama was unbounded. Gradually things took shape. Tents were pitched, a well was dug, and a meditation cabin was erected. Though the students were accustomed to the comforts of city life - some of them bred up in wealth and luxury - they all braved any difficulty that came in the way. Soon they were in a position to devote their individual attention to spiritual practices. At this place Swami Turiyananda lived in one of his most intense spiritual moods - day and night talking only of God and the Divine Mother and allowing no secular thought to disturb the atmosphere of the Ashrama. The minds of the students were constantly kept at a high pitch through classes in meditation, the study of scriptures, and so on. He was always in such an exalted mood that to any topic he would spontaneously, and unconsciously as it were, give a spiritual turn. There was no set of definite rules for the Ashrama, but the very life of the Swami was so very inspiring that everything in the Ashrama went on in an orderly and systematic way. Once a student actually asked Hari Maharaj to formulate to set of rules and regulations. ‘Why do you want rules?’ the Swami said, ‘Is not everything going on nicely and orderly without formal rules? Don’t you see how punctual everyone is, how regular we all are? The Divine Mother has made Her own rules, let us satisfied with that. We have no organization, but see how organized we are. This is the highest organization: it is based on spiritual laws.’ The later days it was found that his method of chastisement was unique. He had a very loving heart, but usually he would keep his emotions under control and not give free play to them. Therefore, a little reserved or a slightly apathetic attitude on his part helped to set the delinquent right. Once, to a young monk who was laughing loudly to the disturbance of others in an Ashrama in India, the Swami said by way of reproof, ‘Well, have you realized God, have you attained life’s goal, that you can give


yourself up so wholeheartedly to laughter?’ A man of God as he was, he could not but talk in that strain even while scolding. Once interrogated by a curious student as to how men and women of pronounced and different temperaments were living so peacefully together I the Santi Ashrama, the Swami said, ‘As long as we remain true to the Mother there is no fear that anything will go wrong. But the moment we forget Her, there will be great danger. Therefore, I always ask you to think of the Mother.’ In those days the word ‘Mother’ was constantly on his lips. Referring to this period, he once remarked, ‘I could palpably see how Mother was directing every single footfall of mine.’ At times fiery exhortation came from the Swami to the students to make God-realization the only aim of life. ‘Clench your fists and say: I will conquer! Now or never - make that your motto, even in this life I must see God’, the Swami would exhort. ‘That is the only way. Never postpone. What you know to be right, do that and do that at once, do not let any chance go by. The way to failure is paved with good intentions. That will not do. Remember, this life is for the strong, the persevering: the weak go to the wall. And always be on your guard. Never give in.’ Sri Ramakrishna used to say, ‘If a cobra bites a man, its poison will have sure effect; in the same way, if a man comes in contact with a really spiritual person, his life is sure to be changed.’ Those who came in touch with Swami Turiyananda or received training under him, were transformed - metamorphosed. In America as well as in India many are the persons whose outlook on life entirely changed because of his influence. Afterwards he used to say, ‘If I can put a single life on the path of God, I shall deem my work my work a great success.’ Certainly, the number of persons whose thoughts turned Godward because of his living example is large. A student who was with him at the Shanti Ashrama writes: ‘To think of Swami Turiyananda is an act of purification of the mind; to remember his life, an impulse to new endeavor.’


But to transform lives is not an easy task. Specially to change the outlook of those who are brought up in a different culture and tradition and are born with diverse tendencies of past lives is an arduous work. As such Swami Turiyananda had a very strenuous life at the Shanti Ashrama, so much so that his health broke down within the short period of two years. Swami Turiyananda badly required a change for his health. It was therefore decided that he should come to India at least for a visit, especially as he was very eager to see the leader - Swami Vivekananda. But before he reached Calcutta, the tragic news reached him that Swamiji had passed away. This news gave him such a great shock that a few days after he had arrived at Belur Math, he again started for North India to pass his days in tapasya. For about eight years he practiced severe spiritual disciplines staying at various places like Vrindavan, Garhmukteswar in Bulandshahr district, Uttarkashi in Tehri State, and Nangal, some sixty miles below Hardwar. Except at Vrindavan, he lived alone and begged his food, though his health was indifferent and he needed help. A brahmacharin went to serve him at Nangal, but he would not allow him to do so, saying, ‘Ganga-water is my medicine, and Narayana is my doctor.’ He realized this idea so tangibly in his life that he felt absolutely no necessity for any other help and care. Afterwards he used to say that when he was unwell at Nangal, at first, he made a deliberate effort to live to the above principle, but soon it became quite natural with him. While at Vrindavan, he was joined by Swami Brahmananda, the then President of Ramakrishna Mission who had taken temporary leave from work for tapasya, and they both lived together performing intense spiritual practices. After coming from America, he no longer engaged himself in any active work, excepting that with the cooperation of Swami Shivananda he built an Ashrama at Almora. Even there, the Ashrama grew as a by-product, as they stayed there only to perform tapasya. As a result of severe austerities, his health was being undermined. But still, he would not desist. His motto was, ‘Let pain and body look to


themselves, but you, mind, rest in the contemplation of God.’ About the year 1911 he developed symptoms of diabetes, which began to increase with the lapse of years. As a result of this, he got a carbuncle on his back, for which he had to operated several times. Strange to say, in none of the operations did he allow himself to be under chloroform; and the surgeons themselves wondered at such a thing. He had the wonderful capacity to dissociate his mind from the body-idea, and so he did not feel the necessity for any chloroform. But he also had extraordinary fortitude as well as living faith in God; so, it was easy for him to bear any amount of bodily suffering. Once, when he had an eye-complaint, nitric acid was applied to one of his eyes through mistake. When the mistake was found out and everybody got alarmed, he simply smiled and said, ‘It is the will of the Mother.’ Fortunately, the eye was saved. The last three and a half years of his life he stayed at the Ramakrishna Mission Sevashrama at Varanasi, where he passed away on 21 July 1922. His death was as wonderful as his life was exemplary. The day before his passing, the Swami said all of a sudden, ‘Tomorrow is the last day. Tomorrow is the last day.’ But none could realize the meaning of these words just then. Next morning when Swami Akhandananda came to see him, Hari Maharaj said to him, ‘We belong to the Mother and the Mother is ours. Repeat, repeat.’ This he himself repeated a number of times. He then made obeisance to the Divine Mother reciting the wellknown mantra beginning with सर्वमङ्गलमाङ्गल्ये (Salutation to the Divine Mother - the source of all beneficence and bliss). This he repeated in the noon and also in the afternoon. In the afternoon he insisted on being helped to sit in a meditation posture. But as his strength gave way, he could not remain siting; and much against his wishes he was forced to lie down in bed. Then he said: ‘The body is falling off - the Pranans are departing. Make the legs straight and raise my hands.’ The hands being raised, he joined the palms and made repeated salutations uttering the name of the Master. And then he suddenly spoke out as if realizing


Brahman in everything; ‘This creation is Truth (सत्यम ्). This world is Truth. All is Truth. Prana is established in Truth.’ Then he recited the Vedic mantras, सत्यं ज्ञानमनन्तं ब्रह्म प्रज्ञानमानन्दं ब्रह्म । He asked to have these repeated; and Swami Akhandananda recited them. Hearing this ultimate Truth of the Upanishads, the Swami said, ‘That is enough’, and entered into Mahasamadhi. It seemed as though he quietly passed into sleep. Not a sign of pain or distortion was visible on his person. His face became aglow with a divine beauty and an unspeakable blessedness. Those who witnessed the incident could not but come to the conclusion that life and death for such a soul were like going from one apartment to another. Swami Turiyananda began life with a firm belief in the utility of self-exertion, but ended in perfect resignation to the Divine will. His selfsurrender was, however, no less dynamic than his early impetuosity to storm the citadel of God. These two attitudes may seem contradictory. But he himself explained how they are not. Birds fly about in the infinite sky on and on till they are tired and weary, then they sit on the mast of a ship for rest. The same is the case with a man who believes in selfexertion. He strives and strives, knocks and knocks, but with every striving his egotism receives a blow till at last it is completely smashed, and he realize that the Divine Mother is everything. But to reach that ultimate stage one must struggle and earnestly. There should be no selfdeception in spiritual life. Because people forget that surrender to the Divine Will becomes identified with a drifting life of inertia in the case of many. Once he experienced that the Divine Mother actually wiped of any trace of egotism in him. And he used to say, pointing to his heart, ‘The mother is wide awake here and not asleep.’ In the course of conversation, he once gave out, ‘At one time I felt that every footstep of mine was through Her power and that I was nothing. I clearly felt this. This feeling lasted for some days.’


There was another aspect of his self-surrender to the Divine Mother. It made him absolutely free from any fear. People who talk glibly of Divine Will and all that are found, more often than not, to be timid and victims of false, if not hypocritical, humility. But the case was just the opposite with Hari Maharaj. He did not know what it was to fear. During the Terrorist Movement in Bengal the police were after many monks living in North India. Hari Maharaj was then at Dehradun. A police officer of high rank was after him incognito. Once he asked the Swami whether he was afraid of the police, as evidently some monks were. They were out for a walk. On hearing those words, the Swami at once halted, looked at the man behind and with eyes emitting fire as it were, said: ‘I do not fear even Death, why should I fear any human being? In the whole life I have done no crime, what reason have I to fear the police?’ The words were uttered with so much strength and firmness that the man looked small. He felt so much awed by the greatness of the personality that stood before him, that he touched the feet of the Swami and apologized. Afterwards he became an admirer and devotee of Hari Maharaj. Even in the complete self-effacement of Swami Turiyananda before the Divine Mother, how energetic he was! He was a man of uncompromising attitude. Whatever he would do, he would apply the whole strength of his soul to it. One found him always sitting erect, even in his illness, even while on an easy chair, he would never bend his boy. This simple physical characteristic represented, as it were, his mental attitude. He was unbending in not allowing Maya to catch him. In his self-exertion as well as in his self-surrender one would find a great spiritual force intensely active in him. When he was in any of the Ashramas or Maths, he would hold classes or inspire people for a higher life through conversation. He was a great conversationalist. But his conversation was always full of great spiritual fervor. In it flowed quotations from the Gita, Upanishads, Tulsidas, Kabir, or Nanak as also from the Bible. Once asked as to how his conversation was so spontaneous and at the same time of a high level of


spiritual quality, the Swami said, ‘Well, from my childhood I have lived that life intensely.’ Not a few received spiritual impetus in their lives through his letters. Not being able to be with him personally, these devout souls had correspondence with him regarding their spiritual difficulties. And the letters he wrote in reply would always wield a tremendous influence upon their lives. These letters indicate his clear thinking, vast scholarship, and more than that, his spiritual vision. Once asked as to how his answers to the questions became so effective, the Swami said: ‘There are two ways of answering a question - one is to answer from the intellect, the other is to answer from within. I always try to answer from within.’ Thus, though not actively engaged in any philanthropic work, the life of Hari Maharaj was of tremendous influence to many. He had a remarkable breadth of vision. In him there was the synthesis of Jnana, Karma, Yoga, and Bhakti and many things more. That was perhaps the main reason why all classes of people were attracted to him. He greatly eulogized the Seva work as inaugurated by Swamiji. Though he himself spent his whole life in intense spiritual practices in the form of meditation and contemplation, he used to say, ‘If one serves the sick and the distressed in the right spirit, in one single day one can get the highest spiritual realization.’ Even while in his very deathbed, he exhorted a monk with the words: ‘Don’t doubt. Do the work started by Swamiji in the right spirit. From the itself will come samadhi or any other supreme spiritual attainment. Have no doubt. Plunge headlong into work. Swamiji once told me, “Haribhai, I have chalked out a new path to God-realization. So long people thought the salvation could be had only through prayer, meditation, and the like. But now my boys will attain the bliss of liberation-in-life by mere selfless work.” So have no doubt. It is his charge.’ He had a feeling heart. He felt for the masses of India and encouraged all forms of philanthropic work. He was in close touch with all current events, and took great interest in the movement started by Mahatma Gandhi, for in this he found the promise for the sunken millions of India.


His devotional side was very marked. He used to visit shrines as often as he could, and devotional songs always had a telling effect upon him. His chanting of sacred texts on special holy occasions was a thing to enjoy – such a devotional attitude and such perfect intonations one could seldom meet with. We cannot do better than conclude this article in the Swami’s own words: ‘I have done what one, being born a man, should do. My aim was to make my life pure. I used to read a great deal, eight or nine hours daily. I read many Puranas and then Vedanta, and my mind settled on Vedanta. When I first read the verse in which it is said that life is meant for the realization of Jivanmukti (freedom in this very life), I leapt in joy, for that indeed was the purpose of my life.’ TEACHINGS OF SWAMI TURIYANANDA

There are several obstructions to concentration: Laya, Vikshepa, Kashyaya, Rasavada. Laya is the mind being overcome by Tamas (inertia) - the mind falls asleep and loses consciousness. Most aspirants are held down by Laya. Vikshepa is the scattering of the mind on multifarious objects. Kashya is finding meditation distasteful - one feels disinclined to meditate. But one must still persist. Rasavada is the mind being fascinated by the vision of divine forms and refusing ascend higher. Never pride yourself on your having gained control over the passions. If you do, they will at once raise their heads. Ever pray to Him, ‘O Lord, save me from them.’ Meditate on his lotus-feet, the senses will withdraw of themselves and the mind lose itself in Him. Freedom can be realized in two ways, by identifying oneself with Him and by living in eternal self-surrender to Him. There can be no freedom of will away from Him. Nothing succeeds unless He wills it. Reliance on one’s apparent self leads to ruin. To presume to be all-knowing is extremely harmful. Self-reliance or self-confidence means faith in the


Higher Self. To persist in remaining what one already is or in holding on to one’s preconceived opinions at any cost - such self-importance is bad. Nothing short of complete self-surrender to Him will do. You call Him the Inner Controller (Antar-yamin), omniscient, and omnipresent, and yet you are afraid to surrender yourself to Him! Do you ask, ‘Will not the Lord do anything for His devotee?’ Yes, He will. But you will have to become a devotee first, you must learn to feel devotion for Him. And devotion, bhakti, is no trifling thing. You have to give Him your mind, life, everything. If you do not do that for God, why should do anything for you? Little does He care! If you feel miserable for want of Him, know that He is very near to you - you will soon have His vision, you will soon attain infinite bliss. At first, we also thought Nirvana to be the highest state of realization. How often the Master rebuked us for this! He used to say that it was a mean conception. I would be amazed to hear him call Nirvana a mean conception. He who wants Nirvana laboriously works his way to the goal, ever anxiously protecting himself against the world. But it is not better to be afraid of nothing? The Master used to say that he could not bear the sight of egotistic persons. Those who go to God without seeking Nirvana are Ishvarakotis (belong to the divine class). Mukti is nothing but giving up seeking advantage. One day the Master was asked if the disease in his throat hurt him. The Master replied: ‘What foolish things you say! Does the body ever attain sainthood? It is mind that becomes such.’ Unless the mind remains unaffected, a mere spartan-like fortitude does not count much; you feel the pain, only you suppress its outward expression. If you feel that all pains and suffering are of the body, not your own, and that you are separate from the body, only then you are right. Mere suppression of passions helps little. There must be a high ideal along with self-restraint. Without a high ideal, the passions will find another outlet. You must give them a new direction, then you will be


automatically rid of them. “Take refuge in Me and control the senses.’ As for example lust. The Master explained: ‘What is lust? It is the desire to get. Then desire to get Him, and strengthen this desire greatly.’ Never expect anything from anyone. But always give. Otherwise a sense of dryness will overtake you. But you must not give your mind to anyone. That you must give only to God. The Jnanis meditate in the head, the Bhaktas in the heart. We generally find so. But when as a result of meditation in the heart, spiritual consciousness expands, there is no more any fixed location of meditation. Meditation begins with the unification of the meditator, the object of meditation, and the act of meditation, when the idea of separation among them is obliterated. When japa has become automatic, when a portion of the mind ever repeats the Name of its own accord, one may be said to have advanced a little in japa in all cases the ‘I’ must be forgotten. You cannot build up life without the living touch of an ideal life. The Bhagavata is always insisting on the company of the good and the devout. Shankara has no doubt laid particular stress on the Jnana (knowledge) aspect. But Vedanta also upholds the necessity of a spiritual teacher. Life can be kindled only from another life. Indeed, the lives of seers are the proof and demonstration of the scriptures. The jiva is bound. Like a tethered cow he is free to a certain extent only, not fully. But he is emancipated if he utilizes that limited freedom in a proper way. He does not do it, but rather abuses it in various ways. They think that inaction in itself is the ideal. If it be so, why then, the wall also should be considered to have attained samadhi. Should not one transcend all dualities? To maintain one’s mental balance under all circumstances, to remain absolutely unmoved - that indeed is the goal! Worship of Narayana’- how exquisite! This is the characteristic of the present age. Meditation and work, both are excellent if properly done. The are equally good. The idea once prevailed that Swamiji has preached differently from Sri Ramakrishna. That idea is considerably discredited now.


They say that work binds. Well, if it binds, it also unbinds. Selflessly done, it leads to salvation. What kind of meditation is this - half an hour in the morning and half an hour in the evening! Must not there be an uninterrupted flow throughout the day? Work done in the spirit of service can lead one as surely to the goal as meditation and japa.


SWAMI TRIGUNATITANANDA

The family name of Swami Trigunatitananda was Sarada Prasanna Mitra. He was born in an aristocratic family of 24 Parganas on 30 January 1865. His parents believed that Sarada was born to them though the grace of the Divine Mother Durga, and therefore they named the child after Her. For education Sarada was sent to Calcutta. As a student he showed great brilliance, and by his charming behavior and sweet manners, he endeared himself to all. While a boy of the fourteen, he was admitted into the fourth class of the Metropolitan Institution of Shyampukur where Mahendranath Gupta or ‘M’, the great devotee of Sri Ramakrishna, was the headmaster; and he passed the Entrance Examination from there. Everybody expected that Sarada would pass the examination with great distinction and win prizes and scholarships, but fate was against him. Sarada lost his gold watch on the second day of the examination through some carelessness. This so much upset him that he could no longer normally write examination papers, and he passed in the second division


to the great disappointment of all. This made Sarada so grief-stricken, that for weeks together he kept sorrowing his lot. ‘M’ loved Sarada dearly. Finding his favorite boy so much depressed in spirits, he one day (27 December 1884) took Sarada to Sri Ramakrishna at Dakshineswar. Thus, a trifling thing like the loss of a gold watch became the indirect cause of great future events. A pure soul like Sarada was at once attracted towards the saint of Dakshineswar, and he began to go to him whenever he could make time. From his very boyhood Sarada showed a rare religious disposition and found delight in worship. In this he was greatly helped by his father who spent the greater portion of his day in spiritual practices. Sarada began to read scriptures, and so retentive was his memory that even at an early age he learnt by heart more than a hundred Sanskrit hymns. The contact with the Master further stimulated his religious spirit, and the Master also kept a keen eye on the training of his boy devotee. Brought up in the atmosphere of an aristocratic family, Sarada looked upon some works as reserved only for menials. But one hot day when Sarada had arrived at Dakshineswar, the Master asked the boy to bring water and wash his feet. There were many friends of Sarada standing near, which made the situation all the more embarrassing. Sarada’s face became flushed with a sense of humiliation. He did not know what to do. But the Master definitely asked him again to do the work. There was no other way. Sarada willy-nilly obeyed. But this incident forever broke down the feeling of aristocracy in the innocent boy and implanted in him a spirit of service. Sarada now joined the Metropolitan College. In the first year he prosecuted his studies regularly and acquired a name as a bright student, but as his visits to Dakshineswar became more and more frequent, Sarada began to show growing indifference to secular learning. His parents became alarmed at this. They thought marriage might give a turn to his mind, and without his knowledge made all arrangements for it. But as soon as Sarada got the scent of this, he fled away from the house.


He first went to see the Master to tell him of his plan to go to Puri on foot, carefully suppressing the fact that he had left the house without the knowledge of his parents. On the way to Puri he had varied experiences. Once for two days he was without food. Hungry and tired, he walked on. He thought he would find some village the evening. But to his utter dismay he found himself in a deep forest, and deeper became the forest as he advanced. In that helpless condition he took shelter in the branches of a tree for the night. But when he was asleep, he was called by a stranger and given food. In the morning Sarada search the whole forest, but as he saw no human habitation in it, he was at a loss to find wherefrom had come the stranger who had befriended him in the night. His parents, however, made their way to Puri and caught him. Sarada brought back home. There was only one month more before the First Arts Examination. Though Sarada had been out of touch with his books for almost the whole year, with only one month’s preparation he passed the examination creditably. As Sarada’s father did not like his son visiting Sri Ramakrishna too frequently, Sarada could not stay with the Master at the Cossipore garden-house, though he snatched at every opportunity to serve him there. After the passing away of the Master, Sarda again showed indifference to worldly things. Now and then he began to absent himself from the house. He actually wanted to give up the world, but the thought of the shock to his parents deterred him from his purpose. To change the mind of Sarada by some supernatural means, his elder brother performed a sacrificial ceremony lasting for about a month and a half and costing a good deal of money. At the end of the ceremony, however, the priests declared that the mind of Sarada would be difficult to change; he was destined to be a sannyasin. Never daunted, this brother of Sarada tried various other means to put obstacles in the path of his renunciation. But as everything failed, he frankly prayed to the disciples of Sri Ramakrishna to persuade Sarada to take to a worldly life. When Sarada knew all these things, he got annoyed and joined the monastery of


Baranagore. But here, he would often be disturbed by his relations, to avoid whom he once actually made an unsuccessful attempt to fly away. At this Math the young disciples of the Master took sannyasa ceremonially and changed their old names. Sarada was name Swami Trigunatitananda, or Trigunatia (Swami Vivekananda once taunted him for his long name and asked him to shorten it. So Trigunatita became the usual name) as he was usually called. Swami Trigunatita had always a great hankering for places of pilgrimage, but his love for Swamiji kept him confined to the Baranagore Math. At last, in 1891 he started on a pilgrimage and visited Vrindavan, Mathura, Jaipur, Ajmer, and Kathiawar. At Porbandar in Kathiawar he unexpectedly met Swamiji, who during that time wanted to keep his whereabouts secret from his brother disciples. After visiting some other places on the way, Swami Trigunatita returned to Baranagore. Some years afterwards, in 1895, Swami Trigunatita again started on a pilgrimage - this time for Kailash and Manasarovar. It was the most difficult pilgrimage one could undertake. His indomitable spirit carried him through. It was the month of June or July. Snow had just begun to melt. The beautiful natural scenery which he saw there amply repaid the hardship which he had undergone in that difficult journey. He had a very daring and adventurous spirit. On more than one occasion his life was in danger in the course of the pilgrimages he performed. But every time he was mysteriously saved. These experiences depended his faith in God all the more. After finishing the pilgrimages, he stayed in Calcutta for some time at the house of devotee and spent his time in deep studies. At this time, he developed fistula which required surgical operation. The doctor came, but Swami would not subject himself to chloroform. The operation continued for full half an hour and the incision was long and deep, but the Swami stood it calmly without the least betrayal of any sign of pain. As soon as he recovered, he again plunged himself into studies. He was buried in books or remained absorbed in doing some literary work. Occasionally he


would take scriptural classes at different places. After some time, the Swami went to stay in the monastery at Alambazar. There also he carried with him his habit of study. His room was packed with books with which he would be found constantly busy. During this period, he started three centers in Calcutta for the training of students. But the plan had to be given up after some time. In 1897, when the district of Dinajpur was in the grip of a terrible famine, the Swami went there and organized relief work. On this occasion his wonderful spirit of service was in evidence. Himself living on ‘bhiksha’ (alms) or sometimes on scanty or no meals, he labored day and night in distributing food to the starving population. Swami Trigunatita had a strange capacity as regards food. He could live for days together with only one piece of fruit for his daily meal. And if he liked, he could eat the quantity of food which it could take four strongly built persons to consume. Having this capacity, he would sometimes in fun bewilder or embarrass his friends. Once, on one of his pilgrimages, he went to a hotel for his meal. But he began to eat so much that the poor hotel-keeper had to approach and request him with folded hands to stop taking further food, and said that he would not charge the Swami anything for what he had already taken. In later days the Swami greatly enjoyed narrating this incident. For some years he had an idea of starting a magazine in Bengali for spreading the Master’s message. Swamiji also had blessed the idea from the West. The idea took a practical shape, a few days after the Ramakrishna Math had been transferred from Alambazar to a rented house near the present site of Belur Math. Swamiji now offered to supply all the money needed for giving a start to this project. Accordingly, a press was bought and Swami Trigunatita was put in charge of the whole thing: he was the editor of the paper, the manager of the press, and as a matter of fact, everything. To organize the publication of the periodical, which Swamiji named Udbodhan, Swami Trigunatita had to undergo herculean labor. He did not care about his daily meal and he did not care about his


physical comfort or illness; Udbodhan became the one absorbing interest of his life. When Swamiji heard of the labor and hardship which Swami Trigunatita was passing through, he remarked that such an amount of work and hardship was possible only for a disciple of the Master who lived only for the good of humanity. Though Swami Trigunatita was killing himself, as it were, in the work of Udbodhan, whenever he heard of anybody being ill, he was sure to be by his bedside. In fact, no work would give greater delight to the Swami than serving others. Once an employee of the Udbodhan Press was attacked by cholera. Swami Trigunatita made all arrangements for his treatment and himself attended the case constantly. The poor servant was dumbfounded at the conduct of the Swami: could he believe his eyes that a master was doing so much for a paid hand! As a result of the vigilant care and ceaseless industry of Swami Trigunatita, the work in connection with the Udbodhan was being well organized. But Swamiji asked him to go to San Francisco in America to replace Swami Turiyananda who was returning to India. Swami Trigunatita was ready to obey any command of the leader, and he agreed to go the West however it might interfere with his Indian mode of living. But, unfortunately, Swamiji Passed away unexpectedly on 4 July 1902, to the great grief of all his brother disciples. Swami Trigunatita’s departure was thus delayed. He, however, sailed for America via the Pacific, some months after this sad event, and reach San Francisco on 2 January 1903. The matter of dress for the new country he settled by going in oriental costume. As regards the question of food, he determined to maintain a strict vegetarian diet, and not being able to get accurate information as to the vegetables and fruits grown in the United States of America, he started on his voyage with the resolution to live, if necessary, on bread and water. He afterwards found, of course, that vegetables and cereals of all kinds were grown in abundance in that country. When the Swami arrived in San Francisco there was a group of loyal friends and students of Vedanta to greet him, and he was taken at once


to the home of Dr. M H Logan, the President of the San Francisco Vedanta Society. A few weeks later, he went to the home of Mr. and Mrs. C F Peterson, where he was to make his headquarters. Soon after, old and new students of Vedanta began to come from all directions. The news that another Swami, again a direct disciple of Sri Ramakrishna, had come to take up the work, spread far and wide, and very soon the Swami’s time was filled to overflowing. Classes were organized and a hall secured where lectures were given on Sunday afternoons. The home of the Petersons soon proved too small for the large attendance at the classes, and the decision was made to find more commodious quarters. A flat was taken in March 1903, giving larger space for the classes and lectures. Classes were regularly held on Monday and Thursday evenings for members. In the year 1904, in response to calls, the Swami found a fertile field for work in the city of Los Angeles in Southern California, 425 miles from San Francisco. But after organizing classes there, he found a difficulty in carrying on the work at that distance: so, in the same year he wrote to India for an assistant Swami to take charge of that work. The Swami who came to take up the new work was compelled to return to India for reasons of health at the end of the year. In 1904 the work had grown to such proportions that Swami Trigunatita felt the time had come when the Vedanta Society of San Francisco should have a building of its own. With Swami Trigunatita, to think was to act, and a committee was at once appointed to look for a suitable site. Soon a meeting of all the members was called, the funds were quickly raised, and a plot of land was purchased in the name of the San Francisco Vedanta Society. Plans were immediately commenced for the building under the supervision of the Swami, and at last took form in what was to be known as the first Hindu Temple in the whole Western world. The call for subscriptions went out, and almost without exception the entire membership, with many friends of the movement, responded. Rich and poor, old and young, came with their offerings and before long, sufficient


funds were subscribed to commence operations. In the month of August 1905, with appropriate ceremonies, the cornerstone was laid. Here at last in San Francisco, the city beside the Golden Gate, a permanent center was established, a channel through which the Truth could flow to quench the thirst of thousands of world-weary souls with its life-giving waters. With regard to the future of the Temple, the Swami said, ‘Believe me, believe me, if there is the least tige of selfishness in building this Temple it will fall, but if it is the Master’s work, it will stand.’ The Temple was dedicated to the cause of humanity on 7 January 1906, and the first services were held on Sunday, 15 January. Shortly after this, an idea of starting a monastery in connection with the Vedanta Society occurred to him. There were a number of young men attending the lectures and meetings of the Society who had an inclination to live the life of brahmacharins. About ten of them became the inmates of the monastery. This number was added to occasionally, but the newcomers were not always permanent, and the number remained at an average often. The young men were all engaged in various occupations and continued to earn their own living, contributing according to their abilities their share of the expenses of the monastery upkeep, until such time as they might either desire or were ready in the Swami’s judgement to take the vows of brahmacharya. These young men were subjected to strict discipline. They had to rise early in the morning, meditate regularly and do all household duties such as cleaning and sweeping. The Swami instructed them that all work connected with the Temple was holy and, if performed in the right spirit, would purify their minds and advance their meditation. The Swami was found of forceful maxims. When someone recited the great watchword of the American Republic, ‘Eternal vigilance is the price of liberty’, he made him repeat it. Some of the mottoes hanging in every room of the monastery were: ‘Live like a hermit, but work like a horse’; ‘Do it now’, ‘Watch and pray’; and one which is constantly quoted, ‘Do or die, but you will not die.’


The Swami Thoroughly believed in singing as a spiritual exercise. In the early morning he often took the young men up on the roof of the monastery to sing devotional hymns and songs. Half a mile distant was the bay of San Francisco, and sometimes the Swami took them thither for the morning singing and meditation. At that early hour none were astir except the fishermen in their motor boats and an occasional ship putting out to sea. Usually, the air was calm and still, and, as the voices rolled out over the waters of the wide bay, it must have been a source of wonder to the listening sailors and fishermen. The Swami’s life was an example to others in every respect. But he was under the continuous scrutiny of some young men for any deviation from his own precepts. There were those who never questioned, but there were some doubters, or unwilling believer, and these were eventually satisfied. For all that they found in his character was the one consuming purpose to give his life for the salvation of others, and that all of his undertakings were only means to that end. A great disciplinarian of the highest order, his was the brightest example of what a disciplined life should be. He ever maintained his sannyasin life and, not withstanding his various ailments, insisted on sleeping on the floor of his office, a light mattress being the only concession he would make to the entreaties of those concerned for his health and comfort. In addition to his unceasing daily labors, the Swami cooked all the meals for the monastery, so that the young men might eat pure, Sattvika food, so very essential for the growth of spiritual life. Always to bed later than the others, he was yet the first to rise. This he did, not for a day or a month, but from year to year. He was the model of punctuality and regularity. This discipline in punctuality was all the more remarkable when it is remembered that, in the first place, it was not natural to him, and in the second place, his mendicant life aimed at destroying the very idea of time itself. Seeing, however, the value of the virtue of punctual himself and then required it of his disciples. As he had his mind fixed on the inner core of things, possible external bad results never deterred him. To the genuine disciple he would say, ‘I don’t


mind if I break every bone in your body, so long as I can drag you up to the shores of the Ocean of Immortality and throw you in; then my work will be finished.’ Sometimes young men came to the Swami expressing their desires to live the ascetic life under discipline. Some had read the lives of saints, and in their mind’s, eye was the picture of a monk’s cell with its association of many forms of asceticism. To such, the Swami suggested, they should spend a few months in the Temple monastery as a preparation for the solitary life. They were then assigned sleeping quarters, usually in the same room with others, and subjected to the limitations of privacy which such close contact brought. This was the first step in discipline as nearly all were accustomed to sleeping in a room alone. Then to their surprise, they sat down at least twice daily to wholesome and substantial meals. Nothing seemed to accord with their idea of asceticism. After two or three months, they discovered that some of the hardest discipline lies in the conquest of the ego under the constant friction of this daily association. Some would make complaints of others to the Swami. He would reply, ‘Did you not ask for discipline?’ ‘Yes’, they would answer, ‘but not that kind’, and then leave monastery. Those who endured and made the best of everything conquered themselves and learnt the true spirit of service to others. Some of them afterwards looked back on the years of their monastery life as among their most delightful memories. The life of the Swami was one long sacrifice, and those who were privileged to be in his presence found their doubts and troubles melt away like snow before the sun. He veritably radiated holiness, for he ever lived in the consciousness of the Divine Mother. Every moment of contact with him was one of increasing education, conscious and unconscious. From the year 1913, one by one, by death and other reasons, the monastery membership began to diminish until only a few remained and the monastery was finally closed with the death of Swami Trigunatita himself.


The Swami also started a nunnery as a separate community at the earnest entreaties of some women disciples who wanted to live a life of discipline under the personal spiritual instruction of the Swami. The women disciples were full of earnest zeal and lived the life most sincerely. They did all their cooking and household work in the spirit of worship and service to God and faithfully adhered to the rules laid down by the Swami as regards eating, hours of rising, and general spiritual conduct. They worked hard but were happy at the thought that they were working out their salvation for the ultimate goal of realization and freedom. The Swami’s hope was that the nunnery might be the seed of awakening a spiritual life among the women of the USA and that great results might accrue from its apparently small beginning. In 1909 the Swami started a monthly magazine, called Voice of Freedom, as a channel through which to reach many souls who either did not attend his lectures or who were too far away to come to them. The magazine ever and always held constant to the high ideals of the truths of the Vedanta philosophy and the variety of materials published soon attracted a wide circle of readers. The magazine continued for seven years, after which period it was stopped to the disappointment of many Vedanta students. Every year the Swami would lead a selected group of students to ‘Shanti Ashrama’- peace retreat in the San Antone valley, eighteen miles southeast of Mt Hamilton, California, the site of the world-famous Lick Observatory. Situated at a picturesque spot, the Shanti Ashrama, as named by Swami Turiyananda, who first took up the work there at the instance of Swami Vivekananda, was an ideal spot for spiritual culture. It reminded one of the ancient Ashramas of the Indian Rishis in the Himalayas, and the very atmosphere of the place was spiritually invigorating. Practically the whole day - from 3:45 in the morning when everyone was getting up, till ten o’clock in the night when lights were out - the inmates were busy meditating, attending scriptural classes, listening to discourses, and so on. Even eating was regarded as one of the most important factions of the spiritual life, and the Swami devoted the meal


times to chanting, instruction, and scriptural reading, himself taking his own meals apart from the class. One day a week was set apart as a day of individual solitude and fasting, as a voluntary asceticism. All who participated retired to their cabins, where they could spend the entire twenty-four hours in meditation or other spiritual practices. To some, in that holy place, there came revelations and experiences in the twenty-four hours which silenced doubts, satisfied anxious longing, and gave new impetus to their spiritual aspirations. The minds of all, however, seemed to be like an open book to the Swami, and individuals found that their inmost motives and actions had become known to him, and more than one was thus sometimes checked in rash impulses and extremes of conduct. Others, during the time of meditation, received spiritual visions and felt themselves transported into a different world. Sometimes on the nights of the full moon, the Swami held what might be called a dhuni (fire) ceremony, when under the open sky, round a fire, the students would sit and spend the whole night in spiritual practices. That was one of the valuable exercises for every student. In order to relieve any strain that might result from a diet of too great seriousness, the Swami declared two afternoons a week as holidays, and a stream of genuine fun and merriment followed. The Swami himself was the leader in the fun. Those who were privileged to attend the Shanti Ashrama classes could hardly forget their unique experience there; they found the desire ever recurring in their minds to renew their visits and spiritual inspiration. How every act of the Swami was sanctified, surcharged with spiritual motives, could be evidenced from the instructions he gave to select students who were asked to do platform work in the Hindu Temple. The discourse was to be made an occasion for the application of Vedanta philosophy in practical life. A lesson or a lecture was ‘to be taken sincerely as a spiritual service and religious practice for one’s own spiritual advancement’. In preparing themselves, the students were to


‘meditate that the grace of God was being conferred on the subject, that it was being sanctified by His Divine touch’. The subject was to be received through prayer, and at the time of delivery, the speaker was to remember that he was ‘talking to God, that God was the only audience’. The Swami would very often say, ‘That mind which is attached to more than one thing can never reach the goal.’ ‘Learn to see God in everything about you. Smear God over everything, and your mind will think of Him alone.’ The second year after the Swami’s arrival in San Francisco, his health suffered from an attack of rheumatism and other physical troubles. The different climate, the new confining life due to his intense devotion to the work, all told upon a constitution weakened by the merciless rigors of early asceticism on the path to realization. For one to whom the body had ceased to be the means to an end and was now only kept for the purpose of service to humanity, it was irksome to take proper precautions for its protection, and various ailments secured a foothold, resulting later in serious illness. As the years drew on, the Swami’s ailments increased in number, but he never allowed them to interfere with his work. For the last five years of his life, he suffered constantly, day and night, from chronic rheumatism and Bright’s disease. So complicated were his physical troubles that he used to say, ‘This body is kept together only by the force of will; whenever I let go, it will just fall to pieces of its own accord.’ Notwithstanding this great handicap of ill health, he arose regularly 4 a.m. daily; and while meeting the demands of all his other duties, he never failed to conduct the regular lectures and classes. If anything, his activities increased. So resolute and determined was his that only a few knew the true condition of his health, but unmistakable signs began to appear showing that the body was yielding gradually to the heavy burdens imposed upon it. But alas, nobody knew that the end would come in an unexpected and tragic way! In December 1914, two days after Christmas, which had been celebrated with wonderful solemnity in the San Francisco Hindu Temple, Swami


Trigunatita was holding a Sunday Service when a live bomb was thrown to the pulpit. It was the act of a young man, a former student of the Swami, who did it in a fit of depression and an unbalanced state of mind. Immediately there was an explosion, and a cloud of dense blue smoke obscured the platform. When the smoke cleared, it was found that the young man himself had been killed, and that the Swami had received severe injuries. It was immediately arranged to remove the Swami to a hospital. On his way to the hospital the Swami said, ‘Where is Louis, poor fellow?’ In the midst of excruciating pain his mind was yet filled with pity that anyone should do such a rash act. Although medical skill did all it could, the shattered condition of the Swami’s constitution, for years ready to disintegrate, was such that the system could not resist the infection from the wounds. Although every waking moment was one of intense suffering, no word of complain ever passed his lips. From time he gave instructions to one disciple after another to be faithful to the cause to the end and, even to the last, his thoughts were never for himself but for the Master’s work and mission. On the afternoon of 9 January, Swami aroused himself out of an apparently unconscious state and in the course of the conversation with the young disciple in charge said that he would leave his body the next day. January 10, the birthday of Swami Vivekananda. Just before 7:30 p.m., on January 10, the young man was called out of the room for a few minutes, and when he returned the Swami had already left the body for that plane from which he had been attracted to earth by his Master to take up the work of the salvation of humanity. Thus, passed a great soul whose life was devoted to the spiritual unfoldment of man - a great yogi and the servant of all. In what great esteem Swami Trigunatita was held in San Francisco could be judged from the large number of people who attended his funeral service. These were not simply his students and disciples but represented many sections of society.


TEACHINGS OF SWAMI TRIGUNATITANANDA

Is God all-merciful? He is both merciful and cruel. He is softer than the flower, and yet harder than adamant. Sometimes He is loving mother, and sometimes most terrible - the very consort of all-consuming time! Infinite are His forms and infinite His qualities. He alone Knows how he would guide someone or bless somebody. All that is beyond the comprehension of man, nay, of the gods even. He can be both infinitely kind and infinitely cruel - it is all according to His will. He cannot be guided according to our thoughts and wishes. We are His, and He will deal with us just as He pleases. Our devotion must not be dependent on any particular action, quality, or form of His; our devotion must be without any motive. It is extremely bad if our devotion increases when He is kind and it takes to flight when He is cruel or does not heed our prayers. But I concede that for the beginners, devotion cannot be free from motives altogether. Men do not understand this simple fact that it is of little consequence how one conceives of Him - as kind, cruel, or what not, but what is fraught with danger is not to call on Him at all. One must call on Him no matter whether one does so under the idea that He is cruel or that He is gracious. I have no need of knowing what He really is, nor can there be any end of such knowing; and what does such knowledge count for? I have come to the mango orchard to taste mangoes, what do I care about a detailed knowledge about the tree and the orchard? God likes play, He is both kind and cruel, and again He is beyond both he is without attributes. Everything is possible in Him, for He is infinite, and He can become everything. He has no end, no finitude, no limit. One should cultivate goodwill for others in one’s mind with great assiduity, cordiality, and sincerity. One who keeps one’s mind ever filled with goodwill for others can get a thousand faults of his own to ashes and he comes to be remembered as a saint. Through goodwill for others, he rises from lassitude to activity, from poverty to wealth, from miserliness


to generosity, from insignificance to fame, and from ignorance to wisdom, nay from muteness to oratory and from lameness to a scaler of mountains. So powerful is goodwill. Goodwill is so pure and holy, so strong and vital that even if one cultivates for oneself, that goodwill converts itself into the welfare of others at last indirectly and imperceptibly; and though in the first stages (in such cases) others come within its purview indirectly, with maturity it works for others even directly. To the outsiders, it seems at the beginning as though saintly people are engaged in their own welfare, hugging good wishes for themselves alone to their hearts, and engaging themselves in spiritual practices for their own good, but when they attain perfection, it becomes obvious to all that they cannot help spending the remaining portions of their lives in doing good to others alone. A good man means a man with good wishes for others. According to some, the stage of family life is considered to be the highest of the four stages of life. It is a most sacred stage; it is not meant for people leading a beastly life, but for those who have purified themselves by passing through an earlier stage of continence and purity of heart. Just think of the care one must take in living properly in that stage of a householder’s life, to whom holy man or monk, nay, even Narayana Himself pay visits. It is not in India alone that continence has been given such a dominant and absolutely necessary position in the domain of religion; all countries and all religions sing its praise in the same way. They all speak of the same kind of continence here and elsewhere. A holy man is full of compassion. About Sri Ramakrishna I heard that as he was one day walking on a lawn, he once turned back to find that the grass over which he had trodden were trying to raise their heads again with difficulty. This made him weep, and he said, ‘Alas, these too are sentient, these too are suffering greatly!’ From that day on, he could not walk on lawns.


Sri Ramakrishna would say, ‘He who can give up his wife, can also renounce the world’ that is to say, if one has succeeded in discarding his hankering for sense enjoyment, one has no other object left that has to be given up afresh. How many times and in what infinite ways have we been born and reborn! But in no life did we take shelter under God. It does not take such a long time to surrender oneself to God. It does not take even a single life to dedicate oneself to His Lotus feet, nay it does not take even a moment! The only thing needed is the will to do so. So easy it is, and yet we fail! The most effective means of getting control over the senses is to look upon all women as one’s mothers. You are apt to look on them otherwise from your childhood, and you never call on women as mothers with all sincerity, that is why the problem of sense-control becomes so difficult. Just as on seeing an image of any goddess, we have a natural inclination to salute her, to worship her, and to pray to her, so also may our devotion be aroused on seeing any woman, and may we feel a natural inclination from within to bow down to her! Keep on praying to God with your whole heart; if the need arises for you to have a guru, God will send somebody for you who will be just the man you want. If you do not believe in a mantra, that too is not imperative. A mantra is needed for bringing the mind under one’s control. One who succeeds in controlling the mind, has not much need of a mantra. But one thing you must know: generally speaking, it helps greatly to use some mantra in the beginning. But if you cannot believe in it, why, you can just choose any one of the names of God and go on repeating the same. He is for all, and comes to anyone who calls on Him. People talk of finding out the proper kind of guru. But that is not a reasonable position in all cases. Whoever the guru may be, everything will progress nicely if the disciple is earnest and sincere. People of all castes can be initiated by a good guru who has attained perfection. What caste can a true devotee or the perfect souls have? When


the individual souls merge in God (like rivers in the sea), they can no more have any individuality. So how can there be then the distinctions of caste? Such distinctions as brahmin, shudra, belong to the body, and never to the soul. A man becomes perfect in proportion as he rises above the idea of body. But nobody can recognize a perfect man unless he is himself one.


SWAMI AKHANDANANDA

Swami Akhandananda, or Ganhadhar Ghatak, as he was called in his pre-monastic life, was born on September 1864, in Calcutta. Even from his boyhood he was of a deeply religious turn of mind, and had extremely orthodox habits. He bathed several times a day, cooked his one daily meal himself, read the Gita and other scriptures, and - regularly practiced meditation. This was his mode of life when he came in contact with Sri Ramakrishna probably in 1883 at Dakshineswar, which he visited with his friend Harinath (Swami Turiyananda), The Master, as was customary with him, received him cordially, and asked him if head seen him before. The boy answered that he had, when he had been very young, at the house of Dinanath Bose, a devotee who lived at Baghbazar. The Master made him stay overnight, and when he was taking leave the next morning, Sri Ramakrishna asked the boy, in his characteristic way, to come again. Then began that close association between the Master and the disciple which afterwards ripened into a strong urge for renunciation of the world on the part of Gangadhar, and his dedication to the service of God in man. Every time he visited Dakshineswar he was charmed to see some new phase of Sri Ramakrishna’s God-intoxicated life. He felt the silent


transforming influence of his love and received practical instructions from him on spirituality. Under this tutelage, Gangadhar gradually dropped his over-orthodox observances, which the Master described as ‘oldish’, saying, ‘Look at Naren (Swami Vivekananda). He has such prominent eyes! He chews a hundred betel rolls a day, and eats whatever he gets. But his mind is deeply introspective. He goes along the streets of Calcutta seeing houses and chattels, horses and carriages, and everything as full of God! Go and see him one day. He lives at Simla (a district of Calcutta).’ The next day Gangadhar saw Narendranath and at once understood the truth of the Master’s remark, to whom he reported his impressions, and the Master wondered how the boy could learn so much in a single interview. Gangadhar said, ‘On reaching there, I noticed those prominent eyes of his and found him reading a voluminous English work. The room was full of dirt, but he scarcely noticed anything. His mind seemed to be away beyond this world.’ The Master advised him to visit Narendranath often. This was the foundation of his abiding devotion and allegiance to Swamiji, the hero of his life. Gangadhar went often to Dakshineswar and subsequently to Cossipore to meet the serve the Master till the latter finally entered into Mahasamadhi in August 1886. When the Monastery at Baranagore was started, he kept close contact with his brother disciple there and particularly with Narendranath, whom he loved dearly. But though he did not join the monastery immediately, he was fired with the ideal of leading the unfettered life of a wandering monk and started in February 1887, on a long pilgrimage to the Himalayas and Tibet. He crossed over to Tibet thrice and finally returned to India in 1890. After his return, he was full of the grandeur of the Himalayas and Tibet, had frequent correspondence with Swami Vivekananda, then at Ghazipur, who induced him to join him in travelling some places of the Himalayas. Accordingly, Swami Akhandananda came to Baranagore monastery, and after spending a few happy months with his brother disciples, sharing his experiences with them, he set out in July 1890 with


Swami Vivekananda on a pilgrimage to the Himalayas. Visiting important places on the way they reached Almora, whence very proceeded to Karnaprayag on the route to Badrinath. But illness of the one or the other prevented their proceeding farther, and they returned after some weeks, via Tehri, to Dehradun, whence Swami Akhandananda went to Meerut for treatment. Soon after this, he was again joined by Swami Vivekananda, who had been taken seriously ill while practicing austerities at Rishikesh, the great resort of monks at the foot of the Himalayas. He brought with him some of the other brother disciples, including Swami Brahmananda. When, after five delightful months of association of the brothers, Swami Vivekananda, impelled by an inner hankering to remain alone, left them to make a tour of the country as a wandering monk, Swami Akhandananda, unable to bear his separation, followed his footsteps from province to province, determined to find him. But at every place he visited, he got the disconcerting news that Swamiji had left it a few days ago. He persisted in his search with unflagging resolve, till at last he discovered the object of his search at a port called Kutch Mandvi in distant Kutch. He, however, yielded to the leader’s earnest desire to be left alone, and each continued his pilgrimage separately. Shortly after Swami Vivekananda’s departure for America in May 1893, Swami Akhandananda learnt from Swamis Brahmananda and Turiyananda at Mt Abu, that the real motive of the leader’s journey to the West was to find bread for the hungry masses of India. For the sight of their crushing poverty and misery was too much for him, and he considered it absurd to preach religion to them without first improving their material condition. This communication made little impression upon Swami Akhandananda at the time. Then he fell ill and went for a change to Khetri, there, after six month’s rest and treatment, under the care of Maharaja Ajit Singh, a staunch disciple of Swami Vivekananda, he regained his health. But those months gave him ample opportunity to come in close touch with all sections of people, high and low, rich and


poor, and it was then that he realized the truth of Swami Vivekananda’s words. Now himself also burning with desire to serve the poor and helpless masses, he wrote to Swamiji in America asking for his permission. The encouraging reply he received pushed him on, and in 1894, he began his campaign against poverty and ignorance. It did not take him long to realize that the appalling poverty of the masses could not be removed without proper education. Hence education became his first objective. He talked with the Maharaja and his courtiers impressing upon all the need of educating their children, and succeeded by strenuous efforts in raising the strength of the local High School from 80 to 257, as well as in improving the teaching staff. He next visited the villages around Khetri and started five primary schools for the village boys. The Maharaja of Khetri was induced by him to make an annual grant of Rs 5,000 for the spread of education in his territory. At the instance of the Swami, the Sanskrit School of Khetri was converted into a Vedic School, and as the students were too poor to purchase books, Swami raised subscriptions, purchased books, and had them distributed free to the boys by the political Agent. He also induced the Maharaja to lift the ban against the admittance of his subjects from seeing him on durbar days. Next year the Swami happened to visit Udaipur, where he was much pained to see the condition of the Bhils, the aboriginal inhabitants of the place. With the help of a friend, he had them sumptuously fed one day. He also took great pains to start a middle English School at Nathadwara, and founded at Alwar and other places of Rajputana a number of societies which regularly discussed useful social, religious, and educational topics. Finally, he left Rajputana and returned in the end of 1895 to the monastery, which was then at Alambazar. Here also he was not idle. Whenever a cholera case was reported in the neighborhood, he would run to the spot and try his utmost to nurse the patient to recovery without any regard for personal safety. In the beginning of 1897, he started northwards on foot along the Ganga till he came to a village some twenty miles from Berhampore, in the district of


Murshidabad, where he met a poor Mohammedan girl weeping: she had broken her pitcher, the only one in the family, and there was no means to replace it. The Swami had only four annas with him. He bought a pitcher from a shop for the girl and gave her half an anna worth popped rice to eat. While he was resting there, a dozen emaciated old women in rags surrounded him for food. He immediately spent his little balance in purchasing some food for them. Shortly after this he came to learn that a famished old woman was lying sick and helpless in that village. He at once went there and did what he could to help her. This was his first contact with famine. The farther he proceeded, the more frightful spectacles he met, till at Mahula he cried halt. He resolved not to move from the place until he had relieved the famine-stricken people, and so wrote to the Alambazar Math asking for help. Swami Vivekananda, who had returned to India about three months before, dispatched two of the with some money to the scene. And so, on 15 May 1897, the first famine relief work of the Ramakrishna Mission was inaugurated with Mahula and Panchgaon as centers, and it lasted for about a year. In the course of its Swami Akhandananda had to take charge of two orphans, and the idea of founding an orphanage first entered his mind. With encouragement from the district officers the Swami, after taking temporary care of a number of orphans, founded in May 1898, at Mahula, the orphanage entitled the Ramakrishna Ashrama, which was removed shortly after to a rented house at Sargachhi. After continuing there for thirteen years the Ashrama was moved to its own premises in the same village, which it has been occupying since March 1913. The Swami, from the foundation of this institution to the last day of his life, bestowed his best attention on its improvement, and it saved a good number of orphan boys from starvation, illiteracy, and degradation. Many of these were put in a position to earn an honest living. Under the Swami’s supervision, the Ashrama also conducted during these years a day and a night school for the village boys and adults and an outdoor


dispensary, which afterwards developed considerably and treated thousands of sick people every year. From 1900 to1910 the Ashrama ran a vocational school, teaching weaving, sewing, carpentry, and sericulture. The handicrafts turned out by its boys won first prizes for several successive years at the Banjetia Industrial Exhibition organized by Maharaja Manindra Chandra Nandi of Cossimbazar, who, by the way, was a staunch patron of the institution. Unfortunately, for want of accommodation, the school had to be discontinued. The Swami not only attended to the general education of the Ashrama boys, but also paid due regard to their spiritual training, the chanting of prayers morning and evening being compulsory for them. Select passages from the sacred books like the Ramayana and the Mahabharata were read and explained to them. Orphans were admitted into the Ashrama without any distinction of caste or creed. Thus a few Mohammedan boys were also maintained at the Ashrama for several years, and trained so that they might develop faith in their own religion. The training given at the Ashrama had enough scope for the culture of the heart as well. Through example as well as precept Swami Akhandananda encouraged his boys to do noble acts of service whenever there was any outbreak; of pestilence or any other calamity in the neighboring villages. Thus, hundreds of cholera patients were nursed by them and saved from untimely death, while prophylactic measures were adopted in many villages with satisfactory results. Even after the opening of the orphanage, Swami Akhandananda could not help taking succor to the distressed in distant places. During the heavy flood at Ghogha, in the Bhagalpur district of Bihar, he forthwith started a relief work in which fifty villages were helped for ten weeks, and himself nursed a large number of cholera patients on the occasion. Again, during the terrible earthquake in Bihar in 1934, he, old as he was, personally inspected the scenes of the ravage at Monghyr and Bhagalpur and gave impetus to the Mission’s relief work in those areas. His whole life was full of such disinterested acts. To him all human beings in


distress were veritable divinities, and he found intense joy in serving them. In this he literally carried out Swami Vivekananda’s behest: ‘The poor, the illiterate, the ignorant, the afflicted - let these be your God. Know that the service of these alone is the highest religion.’ He loved to work silently and unobserved among the dumb masses, and this is why, in spite of his indifferent health, he stuck to the village work in Sargachhi. He was made the Vice President of the Ramakrishna Mission in 1922, and President in March, 1934, on the passing away of Swami Shivananda. The duties of the latter post required his presence at the Belur Math, but he preferred the solitude of Sargachhi, and was quite happy with his orphan boys, supervising the agricultural work and taking care of the valuable collection of trees and plants in orchard. Routine work was distasteful to him. Throughout his life, however, he was a lover of books and gathered a great store of knowledge on diverse subjects. He had a prodigious memory, which, coupled with his strong power of observation and dramatic sense, made him a first-rate conversationalist. His adventurous life as a penniless itinerant monk throughout Northern and Western India, particularly his experiences in Tibet, furnished him with inexhaustible materials for conversation, and he would keep his audience spellbound with narrations of the privations and dangers he had gone through, and the rare experiences he had gained in exchange for them. He was an authority on Tibet, having visited that little known country long before the late Rai Bahadur Chandra Das, and he had had great opportunities of studying the people at close quarters on account of his knowledge of the language. He had a special aptitude for learning languages. While in Rajputana he mastered the intricacies of Hindi grammar. He knew Sanskrit as well as English, and his particular interest was in the Vedas. Not only could he recite and explain choice passages from the Samhitas, but he was one time keen about founding institutions in Bengal for the study and propagation of Vedic culture, for which purpose he visited and tried to enlist the cooperation of scholars and persons of distinction. He was a forceful writer in his mother tongue


and occasionally contributed serial articles to magazines, such as the unfinished ‘Three Years in Tibet’ in the Udbodhan, the Bengali organ of the Ramakrishna Order, and his reminiscences in the monthly Basumati, left, alas, incomplete by his sudden passing away. He was an extempore speaker too, though he was extremely reluctant to appear before the public in that role. His impromptu speech at the memorial meeting in honor of the late Nafar Chandra Kundu, who gave his life to save two sweeper boys from a manhole in Calcutta, was much appreciated. Above all, like many a great saint, he loved fun. In fact, the boyish element was uppermost in him, so much so that even in the midst of a serious conversation he could make his audience laugh with some droll anecdote. His brother disciples, knowing this lighter side of his nature, would tickle him by creating humorous situations, which he, too, relished. One such incident has been narrated in the chapter on the life of Swami Brahmananda, who was a past master in this game. The love which the children of Sri Ramakrishna bore towards one another is indescribable. Swami Akhandananda was the favorite of all. Swami Vivekananda loved him particularly, and affectionately addressed him ‘Ganges’ (the English equivalent for ‘Ganga’); but he did not on that account spare the young Swami when it came to indulging in practical jokes. The Master himself was a great lover of fun and used it as effective means of imparting spirituality and all his disciples shared this attitude towards life. Even if the joke was at one another’s expense, it endeared them all the more to one another. After his assumption of the Presidential office, Swami Akhandananda was called upon to initiate disciple. Though he showed reluctance at first, perhaps out of humility, he soon overcome scruple, and during the last three years blessed a good many earnest seekers of both sexes. He insisted on their observing a high standard of purity and moral excellence in their everyday life. About a year before his death, he had a premonition of the approaching end, and told some of his disciples about it. With this in view, he


arranged the recital of the Ramayana and the Mahabharata in his presence. Near the end he expressed his desire to celebrate the Vasanti Puja, the vernal worship of the Divine Mother Durga, at the Ashrama. But knowing that two of his predecessors had had that desire and passed away without seeing the ceremony performed, he had misgivings about his own case too, and expressed himself to the effect. He had a shed erected for this purpose and said to the Ashrama workers, ‘If I do not live to see the worship, at least I have the satisfaction of raising this Mandapa for the Mother. You will do the rest.’ Like the independent man that he was, he often pooh-poohed the idea of suffering long on his deathbed. Chafing under the infirmities of old age and at having to accept through sheer necessity the loving services of his attendants, he would occasionally declare that he sometimes had a mind to break away from these ties and wander alone, away from the haunts of men. He loved Sargachhi dearly and never liked to be away from it for long if he could help. But it was a cherished desire of his to give up the body, not there but at the Belur Math, the place that was sanctified with a thousand and one memories of his beloved brother disciples from the great Swami Vivekananda downwards. This wish of his was providentially fulfilled, a couple of days before his passing away. A month earlier, Swami Akhandananda had written to the Advaita Ashrama, Mayavati, asking for the wording of a Sanskrit couplet that had appeared in the April number of the Prabuddha Bharata in 1927, in an article entitled ‘Neo-Hinduism’. It ran as follows: न त्र्हं कामये राज्यं न स्र्गं नाङपुनर्वर्म ् । कामये दुःु खतप्तानां प्राणिनामार्तवनाशनम ् ।।

‘I do not covet earthly kingdom, or heaven, or even salvation. The only thing I desire is the removal of the miseries of the afflicted.’ The idea expressed in the couplet was so much after the Swami’s heart that even after the lapse of ten years, on the eve of his departure from this world, he


wanted to know its precise reading. Swami Akhandananda entered Mahasamadhi at the age of 72, at the Belur Math on 7 February 1037. TEACHINGS OF SWAMI AKHANDANANDA

The Isha Upanishad declares that those who do not try to know the Self are killers of the of the Self. A life is well spent if it is dedicated to the quest of the self. What is that Self? One has to hear about the Self first, then think of It, and then meditate on It. Yajnavalkya told Maitreyi that the Self is the dearest of all, and all else is dear for the sake of the Self. It is the Self alone that exists and nothing else besides. Everything springs out of the Self and everything is in the Self. The Self resides in all, though it may be asleep in some. There It has to be roused. The attempt is always going on in everybody to express that Self, and that is what constitutes spiritual practice. In fact, whatever you do is a sort of spiritual practice, be it conscious or unconscious. When the Self will be realized, one will find It present everywhere; and that is one’s highest achievement. One’s purpose of life is to attain that state. Everyone must actualize that experience in life, for that is one’s real nature. Never think, ‘I can’t have it, I am weak.’ Whenever any dejection sets in, remember that saying of the Lord in the Gita, ‘Yield not to unmanliness!’ There is no other path but to call on Him, as though one’s very life is in imminent danger. Always pray, Lord, please reveal yourself; please show yourself to me. I want nothing else, not even heavenly joys. I want you only.’ And along with this, one has to pray, ‘Lord, remove from me all hankering for enjoyment.’ Spiritual progress is a far cry in the midst of selfless and narrow-mindedness. The spiritual path for the present age lies through the harmony of all the paths of the earlier ages - harmony of knowledge, devotion, and service. It won’t do to have only one. The more you take care of yourself alone, the smaller you grow, and the more you think of others as yourself, the bigger you become. Swamiji used


to say, ‘The happiness one derives by thinking of oneself, becomes doubly multiplied when one thinks of somebody else sharing equally in one’s own happiness or unhappiness.’ The more you practice in that way more your Self spreads over the world, and then can Self-knowledge dawn. The more you can think of others as yourself, the more loving your heart becomes, and more is Self-knowledge revealed. Spread your Self over all, and draw in theirs into yours; and then you will realize how intensely blissful that state is; and that will bring you Selfrealization. But the more you tie yourself up with selfish ideas, the narrower you become. Japa is possible at all times; the Lord’s name can be mentally repeated ever and anon. You can undertake japa any time you like. The Master used to say that the bird sings the Lord’s name as it flies. Be quite sincere and straightforward, and never be crooked. Your heart will expand along with your sincerity and straightforwardness. Be always open and above board in all your dealings, never play hide and seek. Straightforwardness is a great virtue. A man’s heart is pure in proportion as he is open in his behavior. Try always to have a pure mind and holy thoughts, and also physical cleanliness. Without heart, everything else counts for naught. Unless the heart expands, nothing else will avail. Merely to continue sitting with the eyes shut will produce no fruit, it will not bring about God-realization. One’s heart must feel for others; one must identify oneself with the happiness and sorrows of others; then only will God be realized. The Lord has to be served with one’s body, mind, and possessions. Merely to sit quiet and make japa will not do. Do serve Him a little with your body as well. And what will mere sitting quiet do? For I find you getting irritated at the slightest provocation; your mind is full of anger. Can that be the result of long meditation in the shrine? The Master used to say that attainment of perfection means becoming gentle. Maintain your equanimity under all circumstances.


In this age of Kali, one thing that counts is the Lord’s name. Go on repeating His name. Whatever work you may be doing; you must have this conviction within: ‘I am no body, He is everything.’ Make no effort beyond your own capacity. Just repeat His name for a hundred and eight times; that will bear fruit in time. Try to increase that number slowly. One must have a firm grasp over the mind. The Lord’s name will bring the highest spiritual perfection. The things that really count are faith and devotion. You ask me, how the Lord is to be worshipped? It is through devotion. Offer flowers to Him. Mantras and formalities, I do noy know; those who perform such formal worship, know all that. Most of us should now turn to work. They can’t meditate by sitting quietly; when they try, the start dozing. They are stepped in lethargy; how can they have spirituality? Do your duty, and in the midst of duty keep alive the idea that you are doing His work. Let activism come first, then will follow peacefulness; and lastly will come enlightenment. Hardly before a few days pass after initiation, they come and complain that they are not having any spiritual vision. Well, my sons, will things to you automatically without any effort? Can visions come for the mere asking? Where is the necessary faith and sincerity? The whole mind is packed with anger and passion. Weep and pray! How piteously they cry for their children and wives! But how few cries for the Lord! God is the nearest to us, for He is in the heart. Men are covered with ignorance, and hence they cannot see Him. They think that He is far away. But He is the nearest to us - the Life of our life, the Mind of our mind. We breathe just because He is there. One should not blame anyone without knowing facts fully, one should rather find fault with oneself first. Know it for certain that pride goes before a fall. This I know from my personal experience.


The very appearance and movement of those who earnestly call on God become something uncommon and impressive. Their very presence brings happiness. Their faces are always happy, their hearts are pure, and their minds are free from likes and dislikes. They are ever eager to remain merged in the Bliss that is God. To them worldly good and evil lose their distinction - both are equal to them. Suppose, for instance, that when you come down from the shrine, I do not speak to you affably a single word that you like, and so you become angry. Now if this be so, what good is that you sat in the shrine for such a long time? Swamiji used to say, ‘During group singing, somebody’s emotion may be aroused and he may fall down in a trance; but when that is over, his mind turns to enjoyment. What kind of trance is that? Swamiji was very much against such emotionalism. Now pay full attention to what I say. Should one squander thoughtlessly the money that people give us? One has to be very careful in spending it. This money is to them dearer than their hearts’ blood, and they earn it with the sweat of their brow. They hand this over to us for good work; and so, it has to be spent carefully. No work should be considered degrading. All works are His. Swamiji himself scoured vessels. When you sweep the floor or dress vegetables, think that you are doing His work. The Master went through hard spiritual practice for twelve long years without sleep. What suffering he had to face! And why? All for the good of the world. Even after these practices he had no respite; he spent his life for the good of the world. Even when he had throat cancer, and the doctor prohibited talking, he allowed himself no rest. It is for work that he left us behind. He it is who made us roam about pennilessly, and he it is again, who placed me here to do his work.


SWAMI SUBODHANANDA

The early name of Swami Subodhananda was Subodh Chandra Ghosh. He was born in Calcutta on 8 November 1867 and belonged to the family of Shankar Ghosh, who owned the famous Kali temple at Kalitala (Thanthania), Calcutta. His father was a very pious man and fond of religious books; his mother also was of a very religious disposition. The influence of his parents contributed not a little to the growth of his religious life. His mother would tell him stories from the Ramayana, the Mahabharata, and other scriptures, and implanted in him, while still very young, love for truth and devotion to God. From his very boyhood he showed a remarkable spirit of renunciation and had a vague feeling that he was not meant for a householder’s life. When pressed to marry, he emphatically said that he would take to the life of a wandering monk, and so marriage would only be an obstacle in his path. As it was settled that on his passing the class eight examination, he was to be married, Subodh fervently prayed to God that the result of his examination might be bad. God heard the prayer of the little boy, and Subodh, to his great relief, failed in the examination and did not get promotion. Subodh was


at first a student of the Hare School and was then admitted into the school founded by Pundit Ishwar Chandra Vidyasagar. At this time, he got from his father a copy of the Bengali book, The Teachings of Sri Ramakrishna by Suresh Chandra Datta. He was so much impressed with its contents that he became very eager to see Sri Ramakrishna. His father told him to wait till some holiday when he could conveniently take him to Dakshineswar. But Subodh was impatient of any delay. So, one day in the middle of 1885, he stole away from house and along with a friend started on foot for Dakshineswar. There he was received very affectionately by the Master, who caught hold of his hand and made him sit on his bed. Subodh felt reluctant to sit on the bed of a holy person, but the Master disarmed all his fears by treating him as if he were his close relation. In the course of conversation, he told Subodh that he knew his parents and visited their house occasionally and that he had also known that Subodh would be coming to him. He grasped the hand of Subodh and remaining in meditation for a few minutes said, ‘You will realize the goal, Mother says so.’ He also told Subodh that the Mother sent to him who would receive Her grace, and asked the boy to visit him on Tuesday and Saturdays. This was difficult of accomplishment for Subodh, as great objection would come from his parents if they knew of his intention. The next Saturday, however, Subodh fled away from the school with his friend and went to Dakshineswar. During this visit Sri Ramakrishna in an ecstatic mood stroked his body from the navel to the throat and wrote something on his tongue, repeating, ‘Awake, Mother, awake!’ The he asked Subodh to meditate. As soon as he began meditation his whole body trembled and he felt something rushing along the spinal column to his brain. He was plunged into a joy ineffable and saw a strange light in which the forms of innumerable gods and goddesses appeared and then got merged in the Infinite. The meditation gradually deepened, and he lost all outward consciousness. When he came down to the normal plane, he found the Master stroking his body in the reverse order. Sri Ramakrishna


was delighted to see the deep meditation of Subodh, and learnt from him that it was the result of his practice at home for; Subodh used to think of the gods and goddesses of whom he heard from his mother. After that meeting with the Master, Subodh would see a strange light between his eyebrows. His mother, coming to know of this, told him not to divulge this fact to anybody else. But seized as he was with a great spiritual hankering, Subodh promptly replied, ‘What harm will it do to me, mother? I do not want this light but That which it comes.’ From his very boyhood Subodh was very frank, open minded, and straightforward in his talk. These characteristics could be seen in him throughout his life. What he felt, he would say clearly without mincing matters. One day Master asked Subodh, ‘What do you think of me?’ The boy unhesitatingly replied, ‘Many persons say many things about you. I won’t believe in them unless I myself find clear proofs.’ As he began to come closer and closer in touch with Sri Ramakrishna, the conviction gradually dawned on him that the Master was a great Savior. So, when one day the Master asked Subodh to practice meditation, he replied, ‘I won’t be able to do that. If I am to do it why did I come to you? I had better go to some other guru.’ Sri Ramakrishna understood the depth of the feeling of the boy and simply smiled. But this did not mean that Subodh did not like to meditate - his whole life was one of great austerity, prayer, and steadfast devotion - it only indicated his great confidence in the spiritual powers of the Master. Subodh’s straightforward way of talking led to a very interesting incident. One day the Master asked Subodh to go now and then to Mahendranath Gupta - afterwards known as ‘M’- who lived near Subodh’s home in Calcutta. At this the boy said, ‘He has not been able to cut asunder his family tie, what shall I learn of God from him?’ The Master enjoyed these words indicative of Subodh’s great spirit of renunciation and said, ‘He will not talk anything of his own. He will talk only of what he learns from here.’ So, one day Subodh went to ‘M’ and frankly narrated the conversation he


had had with the Master. ‘M’ appreciated the frankness of the boy and said, ‘I am insignificant person. But I live by the side of an ocean, and keep with me a few pitchers of sea water. When a visitor comes, I entertain him with that. What else can I speak?’ The sweet and candid nature of Subodh soon made him a great favorite with ‘M’. After this Subodh was a frequent visitor at his house, where he would often spend long hours listening to ‘M’s talk on the Master. Gradually the attraction of young Subodh for the Master grew stronger and stronger, and sometime after the passing away of the Master, he left his parental homestead and joined the monastic Order organized by Swami Vivekananda at Baranagore. His monastic name was Swami Subodhananda. But because he was young in age and simple in nature, Swami Vivekananda would lovingly call him ‘Khoka’, meaning child, by which name he was also called by his brother disciples. He was afterwards known as ‘Khoka Maharaj’ (Child Swami). Towards the end of 1889, along with Swami Brahmananda, Swami Subodhananda went to Varanasi and practiced tapasya for a few months. In 1890 they both went on a pilgrimage to Omkar, Girnar, Mount Abu, Bombay, and Dwaraka and after that went to Vrindavan, where they stayed for some time. He also underwent spiritual practices in different places in the Himalayan region, later went to the holy shrines of Kedarnath and Badrinarayan twice and also visited the various holy places in South India, going as far as Cape Comorin. He also went afterwards on a pilgrimage to Assam. When Swamiji, after his return from the West, appealed to his brother disciples to work for the spread of the Master’s message and the good of humanity instead of living in seclusion, Subodhananda was one of those who placed themselves under his lead. After that he worked in various capacities for the cause of the Ramakrishna Math and Mission. During the great epidemic of plague in Calcutta in 1899, when the Ramakrishna Mission plague service was instituted, Swami Subodhananda was one of


those who worked hard for the relief of the helpless and panic-stricken people. During the great famine on the Chilka islands in Orissa in1908, he knew himself heart and soul into the relief work. He had a very tender heart. The sight of distress and suffering always found an echo in him. He would often be found near sick-beds nursing the sick at considerable risk to his own health. On one occasion he nursed a young student suffering from smallpox of a very malignant type with such loving care and attention that it amazed all who witnessed it. Sometimes he would beg money from others in order to help poor patients with diet and medicine. Many poor families did he help with money given by devotee for his personal needs. One family near the Belur Math was saved from actual starvation by the kindness of the Swami. If he knew that a devotee was ill, he was sure to go to see him. The devotee would be surprised and overwhelmed with emotion at this at this unexpected stroke of kindness on the part of the Swami. A young member of the Alambazar Math had to go back temporarily to his parents because of illness. Swami Subodhananda would now and then call on him and inquire about his health. That young member rejoined the monastery after his recovery, and he remembered for ever with respectful gratitude the kindness he received in young age from Swami Subodhananda. Later, although Swami Subodhananda could not personally work so much, wherever he would be, he would inspire people to throw themselves into the work started by Swamiji. During his last few years, he made extensive tours in Bengal and Bihar and was instrumental in spreading the message of the Master. He would even go to the outlying parts of Bengal, scorning all physical discomfort and inconvenience. In imparting spiritual instructions also, he spent himself without any reserve. During his tours, he had to undergo great inconvenience and to work very hard. From morning till late at night, with little time left for personal test, he had to meet people and talk of religious things - about the message of the Master and Swami Vivekananda. But never was his


face ruffled and nobody could guess that there was one who was passing through great hardship. The joy of giving was always on his face. The number of persons who got spiritual initiation from him was very large. He even initiated some children. He would say, ‘They will feel the efficacy when they grow up.’ But in this act of spiritual ministration there was not the least trace of pride or self-consciousness in him. If people would approach him for initiation, he would very often say, ‘What do I know? I am a Khoka.’ He would refer them to the more senior Swamis of the Order. Only when they could not afford to go to them, died he grant their prayer. In accepting the supplicants as disciples, he made no distinction between the high and the low. He initiated many who were considered untouchable by the society. His affection for them was not a whit less than that for those disciples who held good positions in society or were more fortunately placed in life. Swami Subodhananda was one of the first group of trustees of the Belur Math appointed by Swamiji in 1901, and was afterwards elected Treasurer of the Ramakrishna Mission. His love for Swamiji was next to that for the Master. Swamiji also had great affection for him. Sometimes when Swamiji would become serious and none of his gurubhais dared approach him, it was left to ‘Khoka’ to go and break his seriousness. Swami ubodhananda was childlike in his simplicity and singularly unassuming in his behavior. It is said in the Bible, ‘Except be converted, and become as little children, ye shall not enter into the kingdom of heaven.’ But rare are the persons who can combine in their lives the unsophisticated simplicity of a child with the high wisdom of a sage. One could see this wonderful combination in Swami Subodhananda. Swami Vivekananda and other brother disciples greatly loved the childlike aspect of the personality of Swami Subodhananda. But they would not therefore fail to make fun now and then at his cost, taking advantage of his innocence and unsophisticated mind. Once, while the monastery was at Aambazar, Swami Vivekananda wanted to encourage the art of public speaking among the monks. It was arranged that every week on a fixed


day one of them should speak. When the turn of Swami Subodhananda came, he tried his best to avoid the meeting. But Swamiji was adamant, and others were waiting with eagerness to witness the discomfiture of Subodh while lecturing. Just as Swami Subodhananda rose to speak, lo! the earth trembled, buildings shook and trees fell - it was the earthquake of 1897. The meeting came to an abrupt end. The young Swami escaped the ordeal of lecturing but not the fun at his cost. ‘Khoka’s was a “worldshaking” speech’, Swamiji said, and other joined in the joke. Swami Vivekananda was once greatly pleased with ‘Khoka’ for some personal services rendered by him and said that whatever boon he would ask of him would be granted. Swami Subodhananda said, ‘Grant me this that I may never miss my morning cup of tea.’ This threw the great Swami into a roar of laughter, and he said, ‘Yes, it is granted.’ Swami Subodhananda had his morning cup of tea till the last day of his life. It was the only luxury for which he had any attraction. It was like a child’s love for chocolates and lozenges. It is interesting to record in this connection that when the Master was suffering from his sore throat and everybody was worried and anxious, young Subodh in all his innocence recommended tea to the Master as a sure remedy. The Master would also have taken it but medical advice was to the contrary. Khoka Maharaj was easy of access, and everybody would feel very free with him, would feel his love so much that they would altogether forget the wide gulf of difference that marked their spiritual life and his. Yet he made no conscious attempt to hide the spiritual height to which he belonged. This great unostentatiousness was part and parcel of his very being. It was remarkably strange that he could mix so freely with one and all - with people of all ages and denominations - and make them his own. Many are the persons who, though not religiously minded, were drawn to him simply by his love and were afterwards spiritually benefited. The young brahmacharins and monks of the Order found in him a great sympathizer. He took trouble to find out their difficulties and help them with advice and guidance. He would be their mouthpiece before the elders,


meditate for them and shield them when they inadvertently did something wrong. One day a brahmacharin committed a great mistake, and was asked to live outside the monastery and to get his food by begging. The brahmacharin failed to get anything by begging except a quantity of fried gram and returned to the gate of the monastery in the evening. But he did not dare to enter the compound. Khoka Maharaj came to know of his plight, interceded on his behalf, and the young member was excused. The novices at the monastery had different kinds of work allotted to them. Often, they did not know how to do it. Khoka Maharaj on such occasions would come forward to help and guide them. He was self-reliant and would not accept personal services from others, even if they were devotees or disciples. He always emphasized that one should help oneself as far as possible, and himself rigidly adhered to this principle in his everyday life. Even during times of illness, he was reluctant to accept any service from others, and avoided it until it became absolutely impossible for him to manage without. His wants were few, and he was satisfied with anything that came unsought for. His personal belongings were almost nil. He would not accept anything except what was absolutely necessary for him. In food as in other things he made no choice and are whatever came with equal relish. This great spirit of renunciation, always evidenced in his conduct, was the result of complete dependence on God. In personal conduct as well as in conversation he put much emphasis on self-surrender to God. He very often narrated to those who came to him for guidance the following story of Sridhar Swami, the great Vaishnava saint and a commentator on the Gita. Spurred by a spirit of renunciation, Sridhar Swami was thinking of giving up the world when his wife died giving birth to a child. Sridhar felt worried about the baby and was seriously thinking how to provide for the child before retiring from the world. One day as he was sitting deeply absorbed with these thoughts, the egg of a lizard dropped from the roof in front of him. The egg broke as a result of the fall, and a young lizard came


out. Just then a small fly came and stood near the young lizard, which caught and swallowed it in a moment. At this the thought flashed in the mind of Sridhar that there is a Divine plan behind creation, and that every creature is provided for beforehand by God. At once all his anxiety for his own child vanished, and he immediately renounced the world. Swami Subodhananda’s spiritual life was marked by as great a directness as his external life was remarkable for its simplicity. He had no philosophical problems of his own to solve. The Ultimate Reality was a fact to him. When he would talk of God, one felt that here was a man to whom God was a greater reality than earthy relatives. He once said, ‘God can be realized much more tangibly than a man feels the presence of the companion with whom he is walking.’ The form of his personal worship was singularly free from ritualistic observances. While entering the shrine, he was not obsessed by any awe or wonder, but would act as if he was going to a very near relation; and while performing worship he would not care to recite memorized texts. His relationship with God was just as free and natural as a human relationship. He realized the goodness of God, and so he was always optimistic in his views. For this reason, his words would always bring cheer and strength to weary or despondent souls. Intellectual snobs or philosophical pedants were bewildered to see the conviction with which he talked on problems which they had not been able to solve, all their pride and self-conceit notwithstanding. Towards the end, he suffered from various physical ailments, but his spiritual conviction was never shaken. While he was on his deathbed he said, ‘When I think of Him, I become forgetful of all physical sufferings.’ During this time, the Upanishads used to be read out to him. While listening, he would warm up and of his own accord talk of various deep spiritual truths. On one such occasion he said, ‘The world with all its enjoyment seems like a heap of ashes. The mind feels no attraction at all for all these things.’ While death was slowly approaching, he was unperturbed, absolutely free from any anxiety. Rather he was ready and anxious to meet the Beloved.


The night before he passed away, he said, ‘My last prayer is that the blessings of the Lord be always o the Order.’ The great soul passed away on 2 December 1932. TEACHINGS OF SWAMI SUBODHANANDA

First take hold of your mind through discrimination, then make it calm through proper training, so that it runs towards the Lord all the twentyfour hours of the day. Urge the mind on towards the Lord, then you will understand everything. The All-powerful Mother of the universe resides in every woman. If one calls on the Lord with sincere earnestness, He reveals Himself in the form of one’s chosen deity. Now you pray to Him with utmost devotion and faith, and He will show you the path that leads to Him. He will grant everything - devotion, faith, and all else that one needs. When we see the sun, we see it with the sun’s own light. No other light is required for that. Thus, also we see the Lord through His grace alone. Tulsidas, the great devotee, says that the Lord Himself fulfils the desire of one who takes refuge in Him. For instance, the fish that has its shelter in water can swim even against the current, while an elephant is washed away by it. One must surrender oneself likewise. Before the Lord enters the temple of any one of His children’s hearts, he fills it with devotion, faith, and love, just as a king sends different pieces of furniture and vessels to a subject’s house which he intends to visit. Else, where can the poor subject get all those things? The Lord grants devotion, faith, and love, just because He will come. Keep yourself occupied day and night with good thoughts and good talks. Whenever you find a little leisure in the course of your daily domestic works, never forget to think of Him. Read good books which help such remembrance. If one calls on the Lord, no matter when or under what circumstances, it will never go in vain. For instance, when a cultivator sows his sees, no matter whether it is placed in the ground straight or upside down, it shoots up all the same.


That the mind has been unsteady all along from your childhood is nothing peculiar with you, this is the case with everyone. But one thing you have to remember is that, come what may, you have to proceed towards the Lord, who stands behind all sorrow and suffering. This you must know for certain. However, you may suffer, and however great the pain may be, never forget the Lord’s name. he is our only refuge in weal or woe. Nothing will ever end in evil by the will of Him who is all good. That people undergo diverse sorrows in life is also a source of experience. This is what I have learnt to be the essential truth. The Master will round everybody. You ask me how you can have peace. Swami Vivekananda used to sing a song (of Kabir), which means, ‘Where would you seek for me, O devotee? I am not in Kashi, Kailash, or Mecca, or in a Masjid, or anywhere else, but I am just by you yourself. When you have faith even for a moment, you will find me in a trice through the least searching. Hear of this faith by sitting near all the devotees.’ All this may appear rather too dry and intellectual for you. But know this much for certain that the great Universal Mother lives in and permeates everything - be it happiness or sorrow or anything else. There is another way of attaining peace of mind. When you have no work in hand sit down with the other neighbor and read some good book and discuss about it. Talk of the Lord and you will find how the mind frees itself from all the trammels of the world. Swami Vivekananda once prayed, ‘Lord, place me in a position where all others may criticize and abuse me, so that all my heart, mind, and love may turn to you alone.’ Why do people lose peace of mind? How can a man have peace who thinks bad thought, talks bad things, and keeps his mind occupied with trifling affairs day and night? People generally lack ideals; they are always led by what others say or do. One who is good himself, finds the whole world good, while a thief considers all others to be thieves as well. You complain of restlessness during japa. That is nothing peculiar in your case, many others are in the same predicament. Still, you must never cease


from calling on the Lord, and know this for certain that the Lord’s name cuts through all obstacles. Howsoever it may be - be it perfectly or imperfectly - keep on repeating His name, which has a power of its own. A sweet cake, for instance, will taste sweet, no matter from which side of it you take a bite. Man enters family life ad gets involved in worldly affairs. But if he takes refuge in the Lord and then attends to the duties of life, he can withstand much better the storms and stresses of the world, all of which he can ignore by his dependence on God’s dispensation. All that we see around will cease to exist someday or other, God’s name alone will survive. And anyone who will think of God and repeat His name, will have everything intact - here and hereafter. His name is true for ever. Man suffers just because he forgets God. Diverse are the miseries of this world, which, however, is impermanent by its very nature. He who can accept God as his own, does not suffer so intensely from worldly sorrows. Try to think of God as your father or mother. If weep you must, weep before God, and pray, ‘Lord, grant me faith and devotion, and reveal yourself to me.’ One can hear of good things from anybody. As a man can pick up a valuable gem even from a dirty place, similarly can one hear anything about God that appeals to him, it does not matter who the speaker is. ‘Even a pariah is a saint if he has devotion for God.’ Dedicate your life to good work. God blesses all good action. Never mind how He keeps you - be it in happiness or sorrow. If you are to give your whole mind to anybody, it must be to God alone. Go on doing good works without caring whether men praise or blame. Your ideal must be God and Good works. Innumerable are the men whose passions are strong. The Master used to say that the mind is like a mad horse, which is prone to running hither and thither, and just as a coachman controls the horse with the gridles, so must a man direct the mind with the power of


discrimination, which is already in him. If men are guided by this discrimination, they never come to grief.


SWAMI VIJNANANANDA

Swami Vijnanananda, before he took orders, was known by the name of Hariprasanna Chattopadhyaya. He was born on 30 October 1868, in a respectable family of Belgharia, which is within a couple of miles of Dakshineswar. When studying in the first or second class of a High school, Hariprasanna saw Sri Ramakrishna at Dewan Govinda Mukherji’s house. But Hariprasanna was too young then. The real meeting came off two years later. It was in the year 1883 that Hariprasanna, then a student of the St Xavier’s College, went to Dakshineswar with his fellow students Sharat (Swami Saradananda) and Barada Pal. The Master, as was his wont, showed great love and kindness towards Hariprasanna, which bound him indissolubly to the Master. Young though Hariprasanna was, it did not take him much time to find out that here was a man who was extraordinary in every sense of the word, and he was as much captivated by his words of wisdom as he was drawn by his charming naivety. As the Master soon left for Mani Malik’s house in Calcutta, the three friends followed him there. Naturally, Hariprasanna returned home very late that night. His mother had been waiting anxiously for him, and when she learnt that he had been


to that brahmin of Dakshineswar, who was then considered crazy by a section of people, the good lady said in an angry tone, ‘So you had been to that mad brahmin who has deranged the brains of no less than three hundred and fifty young men?’ In later days, after recounting event, he used to comment, ‘Derangement of brain indeed! The brain is still deranged.’ And he would add, ‘Had I not been caught in the influence of that mad man, who knows where I should have been now - wallowing in the welter of the world?’ He said that he met the Master thus at Dakshineswar five or six times. One afternoon Hariprasanna went to Dakshineswar, and on the request of the Master stayed there for the night. The Master himself took almost nothing at night, but special arrangement was made for the meal of the boy. Then very affectionately, the Master himself hung a mosquito curtain and spread a mat for young Hariprasanna to sleep in his own room - a privilege which was reserved only the chosen few. When Hariprasanna was lying on his bed, the Master came near and began to talk to him. Very tenderly he said, ‘Do you know why I love you all so much? You are my own people. The Divine Mother has shown me this.’ The conversation lasted for some time, during the course of which the boy began to feel sleepy. After a while Hariprasanna found the Master going round and round his bed clapping his hands and muttering something indistinct. He began to wonder whether Sri Ramakrishna was really a mad man as some supposed him to be. Afterwards he used to say that on that night the Master gave him all that was to be given to him. Sri Ramakrishna’s love for his young disciple or future apostles was immense. If any of them did not go to Dakshineswar for a considerable time, the Master would send for him or inquire about him through a messenger. At one time Hariprasanna did not visit Dakshineswar for a rather long time, and the Master sent word to him through Sharat to come and see him. When Hariprasanna arrived at Dakshineswar and met the Master, the latter, in an aggrieved tone, asked, ‘Why is it that you don’t care to come here? It is difficult to get you here even after sending a


messenger!’ The young disciple very frankly said, ‘I don’t always get the mood to come, so I don’t.’ At this the Master simply smiled, and said, ‘You practice a little meditation, I believe?’ ‘I do try to meditate, but how to have good meditation? I don’t have any real meditation at all’, replied Hariprasanna. The answer astonished the Master, who remained quiet for a while. Hariprasanna was looking at his face eagerly awaiting the words that would drop from his lips. As he was doing this, the face of the Master changed; he looked grave and said, ‘All right, just go to the Panchavati now and try to meditate.’ Then he beckoned him to come nearer and wrote something on his tongue with his finger and sent him to the Panchavati. Hariprasanna wended his way towards the Panchavati, but after the Master had touched him, he was in a state of intoxication and could hardly walk. As he sat for meditation at the Panchavati, he became for a long time oblivious of his surroundings and of the outside world. When Hariparasanna returned to his senses, he found the Master seated by his side smiling and gently passing his hands over his body. After a while the Master broke the silence and asked, ‘What? Did you have meditation today?’ ‘Yes, today I had the experience of good meditation’, said Hariprasanna in surprise. ‘Henceforward you will find that you will have good meditation every day’, the Master assured him further. Sri Ramakrishna then went to his room accompanied by Hariprasanna, to whom he very affectionately gave many instructions about the intricacies of spiritual life. Swami Vijnanananda would say afterwards, ‘I was amazed to see his love for us that day. Repeatedly did this occur to my mind: “Indeed, how much does he think for us!” I had no idea of this. There can be no comparison with his love.’ It was on that day that the Master told him, ‘Beware of the wiles of sex-attraction. Be very, very careful on that point. You boys are the chosen people of the Divine Mother. She will get many things done through you. So, I say to you, ‘Be very, very careful.’ Swami Vijnanananda obeyed this instruction in letter and spirit throughout his life.


How very free and intimate was the Master with his disciples is revealed from the following interesting incident, narrated by Swami Vijnanananda: ‘I wrestled with the Master out there on the verandah (pointing out of the west door of the room of Sri Ramakrishna, overlooking the Ganga). He was such a little man, and I was big and strong, so I put him down easily. His body was so delicate, so soft, just like a baby’s. But though victorious in the bout, Hariprasanna felt that some energy had passed into him from the Master through the physical contact, and he felt awed. One of his class-friends says that as a student Hariprasanna was very spirited and would be upset at the sight of any moral turpitude or social injustice. After passing the First Arts Examination from Calcutta he went to Bankipore, Bihar, where he was when Sri Ramakrishna left his mortal body. He related that he had a vision of the Master at that time. He graduated from the Patna College and then went to study Civil Engineering at Poona. After taking his degree of L C E, he joined the Government service and rose in the course of a few years to the position of a District Engineer. By that time the monastery at Baranagore had been founded, and the monastic disciples of the Master often became his guests at different places. The flame of renunciation, however, that had been kindled in him by the Master was burning within him, and he found it impossible to remain in the world for a long time. Even as an officer Hariprasanna was taciturn, would mix with few people, and remained in his bungalow absorbed in his thoughts. But his colleagues and assistants were surprised at his uncommon degree of integrity as well as his strictness in regard to the discharge of his duties. And those who came in close touch with him revered him almost as a god - such was the force of his character, pure, spotless, and at the same time humble and unassuming. In the year 1896, shortly before Swami Vivekananda returned for the first time from his triumphant mission in the West, Hariprasanna joined the Brotherhood at Alambazar, where the monastery had meanwhile been


shifted. Hariprasanna was very devoted to his mother, and it was only for her sake that he had accepted a job and continued in it for some years. But when he collected enough money to meet her future maintenance, he felt his conscience free. He was then at Etah. Before the final decision for renunciation was taken, he had two repeated visions of the Master who urged him to give up the world. So, with his worldly duty over and conviction firm he joined the Ramakrishna Math. Swami Vijnanananda accompanied Swami Vivekananda on his trip to Rajputana and elsewhere. Just before the monastery was removed to its permanent home at Belur in 1899, the task of constructing the necessary building was entrusted to Swami Vijnanananda, who later also supervised the construction of the embankment on the Ganga in front of the main building. Swamiji, who was then living at the Belur Math, one day saw him at work in the hot sun, and, as a favor, but mostly in fun, sent him, through a disciple, the little remnant of a glass of cold drink. Swami Vijnanananda took the glass and, although he noticed the minute quantity of the sherbet sent, he quaffed in just the same. To his wonder, he found that those few drops had completely allayed his thirst! When he next met Swamiji, the latter asked him how he had enjoyed the drink. He replied that though there had been very little left, yet it had the effect of quenching his thirst. Thereupon both laughed. This is but a solitary instance of the pleasant things which took place to sweeten the relationship among the brother disciples. Another humorous incident illustrative of their cordiality deserves mention. While the construction work was going on at the Belur Math, some materials were being eagerly expected. One evening Swami Brahmananda said that the materials would arrive by boat before the next morning, which Swami Vijnanananda doubted. Thereupon a wager was laid and both retired for the night. In the early hours of the morning Swami Vijnanananda got up to see whether the boat had come. It had not; so, he returned to his bed elated at the prospect of winning the wager. A little later, the other Swami also came out, found the boat


moored and quietly retired again. After daybreak Swami Vijnanananda, without suspecting anything, came to him and joyously demanded the wager. ‘What for?’ said the other. Then the disconcerting truth dawned upon Swami Vijnanananda, and finding the tables turned on him, he said, ‘Well, I have no money, you pay it for me!’ General laughter followed. On another occasion a similar result greeted his prediction about rain. Afterwards the Swami would narrate those incidents by way of tribute to his illustrious brother monk. Swamiji, as is well known, was a man of varying moods. Sometimes he was playful, then everybody could approach him with freedom. But at other times he became very grave, when none dared face him with unpleasant facts. One day he was having a talk with Swami Vijnanananda, when the latter, encouraged by his light mood, not only had the boldness to differ from him, but even went so far as to say, ‘India won’t follow your social message!’ Swamiji’s countenance changed. He became very serious, and after a few moments he called out to Swami Brahmananda, ‘Look here, Rakhal, he tells me that I won’t be followed!’ Swami Brahmananda made light of the incident, remarking, ‘Why do you listen to him? He knows nothing!’ Meanwhile, Swami Vijnanananda, who had seen his mistake, apologized, and everything was all right. Swamiji had a great desire to raise a big memorial temple to the Master at the Belur Math and entrusted the task of planning it to Swami Vijnanananda, giving him specific instructions for it. The Swami, in consultation with a noted European architect of Calcutta, prepared a design of the proposed temple, which had to approval of Swami Vivekananda. Swamiji’s premature passing away in 1902 nipped the project in the bud. But the serious thoughts of spiritual giants never die out; they only bide their time. Thirty years after Swami Vivekananda’s exit from this world, a magnificent offer of help came from some of his devoted American students, which made it possible for the authorities of the Belur Math to erect the present beautiful temple of Sri Ramakrishna after the design left by Swamiji. The foundation stone of this noble


edifice was set in its proper place in July 1935, by Swami Vijnanananda as Vice President of the Order. More of this later. For the present we return to earlier events. Swami Vijnanananda, visiting many places as a wandering monk, came to Allahabad in the year 1900. He became the guest of a doctor friend and wanted to pass a short time in that sacred place of pilgrimage. At that time there was in Allahabad a group of young men who met together in a rented house which they called Brahmavadin Club, and they made attempts to improve themselves morally and spiritually through scriptural study, discussions, and worship. This group of boys was organized by a devotee of Sri Ramakrishna who had gone to Allahabad some years back and who left for Calcutta in the year 1900. Then the boys had to manage their own affairs without any superior guidance. When they heard that a disciple of Sri Ramakrishna had come to the city, they thought it a stroke of good fortune and at once went to the Swami to request him to come to their place and stay there for some time to guide and supply them with help and inspiration. The keen earnestness and sincere devotion of the boys persuaded the Swami to visit their place, and after seeing everything, he felt inclined to put up there for a period. This was the beginning of great events. For in this place the Swami passed eight precious years of his life in hard tapasya, study, and meditation till he afterwards established a permanent center of the Ramakrishna Math in the city, where he spent the rest of his life as a unique spiritual force. At the Brahmavadin Club, the Swami had to pass through much hardship - being his own cook and servant, depending for subsistence on what chance might bring. But he hardly felt the suffering, for his mind and thought were centered on a plane where these things could not reach. Most of the time he would spend in meditation and study, seeking no company, but not refusing any help to persons who sought it. Thus, through the silent influence of his example as well as through personal contact, he changed the course of many lives. It was only in the evening that outsiders were generally allowed to see him. For them he would sometimes hold


scriptural classes or would otherwise solve their problems through informal talks. The Swami was always loth to talk much. Especially with regard to spiritual matters he would dismiss the whole problem with as few words as possible - sometimes in fun and sometimes in a serious mood. But he had a wonderful capacity to satisfy the inquirers even with his short conversations. To persons who would come with any big philosophical problem, he would say ‘Just follow the maxims which you have read in the copybooks, namely’, ‘Always speak the truth’; ‘To take a thing without the consent of its owner is to steal’, and so on. It would be very difficult to draw him out specially on spiritual things, but when he was in a mood to talk, he would at once change the atmosphere and supply spiritual food to the listeners which would give them sustenance for many years to come, if not for their whole lives. From the Brahmavadin Club the Swami removed himself to the Ramakrishna Math, Muthiganj, which he founded in the year 1910. Here also he lived the same austere life as in the Club, only his sphere of activity was now wider. In the course of time, a dispensary was opened as a part of the activities of the Ashrama. But these activities touched the outer fringe of his life which always flowed inwardly beyond the possibility of the knowledge of ordinary people. With reference to him, Swami Brahmananda who had great spiritual insight would say, ‘It is very difficult to know him. He always keeps himself hidden. But he is a knower of Brahman. He has known the Self and is thus satisfied.’ He was eager to send those boys had special spiritual aptitude to Allahabad to grow under the inspiration of Swami Vijnanananda. Swami Vijnanananda was also a great scholar. He was a voracious reader and had intellectual interests. He was a great friend of Srijut Srish Chandra Basu and Major B. D. Basu, two noted scholars of Allahabad at that time. At their instance, he also undertook some literary work. Besides writing a two-volume work in Bengali entitled Jalsarvaraher Karkhana (A Manual of Engineering and Waterworks), he translated from Sanskrit into English the voluminous Purana, Devi Bhagavata, two ancient


astrological and astronomical works, Varahamihira’s Brihajjataka and Surya Siddhanta, the latter into Bengali as well as English. Towards his last days he was engaged in translating the Ramayana into English, which work he left unfinished. Swami Vijnanananda loved retirement. He was, therefore, not actively engaged in the main work of the Ramakrishna Mission. But whenever his help was necessary, he would ungrudgingly give it. His knowledge of engineering was particularly useful in this respect. He supervised the construction of some buildings of the Ramakrishna Mission Home of Service, Varanasi, as also of the Swami Vivekananda Temple at the Belur Math. Besides, he helped with valuable advice in regard to the construction of other buildings. On account of his humility and love of retirement, he refused for years on end to be a trustee of the Ramakrishna Math. But when in 1934 after the passing away of Shivananda, the then President of the Ramakrishna Order, the necessity arose for his becoming a trustee, he could not decline it any longer. He became Vice President of the Order that very year, and on the demise of Swami Akhandananda, the next President, he became the President of the Ramakrishna Math and Mission in March 1937. Feeling in his heart of hearts the urge to initiate people - weary pilgrims in the wilderness of life - he broke towards the end of his life his lifelong practice of not initiating anybody although he was pre-eminently qualified to be a guru. This sense of duty marked him throughout. Through his grace hundreds of men and women were placed on the path of spiritual progress. During the last few years of his life, he travelled extensively and visited many centers of the Ramakrishna Order including Colombo and Rangoon. Everywhere his presence was the occasion of spiritual awakening to innumerable persons. Although he would not usually talk seriously with those who approached him with big philosophical problems and the like for the sake of mere discussion, when sincere inquirers approached him with the pressing problems of their inner life, his face would light up and with great


affection, love, and sympathy, he would talk, and the problems, which to the persons concerned appeared knotty, would dissolve immediately, and they would go away with their heavy burden removed. Living, as he always was, on the spiritual plane, to make supreme efforts for the realization of Truth was the burden of his advice given to the devotees. ‘God-vision is the true aim of human life, for that alone can give us real and lasting satisfaction. Man hankers after the things of the world, wealth, sense enjoyment, honor, and so on, in the hope that these can give him happiness in life. But it is the experience of all that the pursuit of these has only a reverse effect on the mind. Not only do we fail to realize the desired and through that, but the restlessness of the mind is even increased, and we are rendered more unhappy than in the beginning. Through wealth and honor our egotism is bloated up, and there is no greater obstacle in the spiritual path than egotism…The supreme duty of man is to remember Him always, whether one is engaged in consciously repeating His name or not. Every breath of ours should be associated with Him, in our mind. We should consider that we breathe in God to make the inside pure, and we breath out God to make the outside pure’, he said to a group of devotees who met him in Madras. ‘But how can we have peace seeing that there is so much conflict and suffering in the country owing to trade depression and political struggles?’ asked one of them. ‘Why do you make so much of these struggles that are going on in the outside world?’ the Swami asked in reply, and he added, ‘Do you think that they will stop, supposing you gain your immediate end and the present phase of the struggle passes away? Certainly, they will not. Restlessness arises not from these external struggles, but from our own internal hankering and our clinging to the things of the world. Even if God were to appear before us to bring peace unto our souls, we would refuse to recognize Him. For when He comes, He takes away our worldly possessions, and few of us are ready to make this sacrifice.’


Sometimes precious little gems were hidden in the words he uttered in fun. For instance, he asked a devotee, ‘Have you ever seen a ghost?’ ‘No, sir’, was the reply. ‘Why, they are already in your body’, said the Swami, ‘not one, but five altogether.’ As the devotee could not follow, and looked at him for explanation, he said, ‘The body made up of five bhutas (the word meaning both ghosts and the constituent material elements), and as one would call on Rama to get rid of the fear of ghosts, so also one must take refuge in Rama to be saved from the lures of these elements.’ Absorbed as he always was in his own thought, there was an atmosphere of aloofness about him. He would always prefer to be left to himself. In later days, when streams of devotees would meet him, he would abruptly say, ‘I would like to be quiet.’ In this matter he was no respecter of persons. He could not submit himself to any social code of conduct. To one who did not know him well, his manner, dress, and mode of life might have seemed a bit out of the way. For instance, he dressed in a very peculiar way, with a loose coat hanging down to the knees and having a number of big pockets. His cap, too, would look odd. When walking on the Allahabad streets, someone might be looking at him with wonder, noticing which he would merrily say, ‘What are you looking at? I am just a monkey (devotee) of Ramji, a monkey of Ramji to be sure.’ At times he would be full of wit, humor, and mirth and throw the audience into roaring laughter. In many things he was just like an innocent child. His frankness was beyond comparison. The same trait made him a very plain-speaking person, but his straight words would not give offence to any man. Though he had a very retiring disposition, he was not insensitive to the misery and suffering around. In Orissa some poor people who took initiation from him brought some presents to the guru. That upset him immensely, and he declared he would not give initiation if such people brought any offerings. His renunciation was very great and spontaneous. There was a delightful naturalness about it. A rich disciple once gave him a purse as a humble offering. ‘You have no place to keep that, I suppose?


And so, you are thrusting the responsibility of keeping the money on me!’ said the swami jocosely but unawares giving out his attitude towards worldly things. He had many spiritual visions and experiences about which he way discreetly silent. Only now and then in unguarded moments would he give out some secret. Once in the course of conversation he said that he felt the all-pervasive present of God. At Pegu in Burma he saw an image of Buddha in a pagoda. ‘It is not like the one I saw’, he said in astonishment. ‘What another image do you mean, Maharaj?’ asked the attendant. Then the Swami described how in one of his visits to the sacred spot of Sarnath he had a vision that everything was dissolved in a sea of pure consciousness and out that appeared a form of Buddha - so sweet and so affectionate! Suddenly the Swami awoke to the consciousness that he was giving out things which he should not. Then he began to make fun about what he had said, in order to neutralize his statements. To him the evidence of the existence of the Master, though not in physical body, was as strong and as natural as that of things seen in broad daylight. That faith kept him calm and joyous under all circumstances. In illness he would not take any medicine, nor would he allow attendance on him beyond the least that was necessary. During the last years of life, he suffered from many ailments. People were hardly aware of them all. Once a rich devotee prayed to him that she might call in the best doctors of Calcutta to examine him. The Swami replied, ‘I am under the treatment of a doctor better than the best physician you can think of.’ This precious information was a great relief to her: she thought that some great physician was attending on him. ‘What is the name of that doctor?’ asked the devotee in eager expectation for an answer. ‘The Lord Himself is my doctor’, said the Swami. This simple answer silenced all controversy as to the necessity of calling in a doctor. From the time when the construction of the Sri Ramakrishna Temple at Belur began, he was anxiously watching its completion in order that he might install his great Master there as early as possible. In view of his failing health, it


was decided to have the installation ceremony done just after the completion of the main shrine. On 14 January 1938, Swami Vijnanananda performed the dedication of the temple and the consecration of the marble image of Sri Ramakrishna amidst imposing rites - a function which was witnessed by about fifty thousand devotees and spectators. Having done this, he felt that the great task of his life was finished, and he got ready to join his beloved Master. He paid only one more visit to Belur, and that was only on the occasion of the Master’s next birthday. He looked very much emaciated, and those who saw him then were apprehensive of the approaching end. Still, he initiated hundreds of aspirants, lay and monastic and answered their queries. The Swami returned to Allahabad and entered Mahasamadhi on 5 April 1938. The body which he gave up like a rejected garment, but which was the vehicle of supreme spiritual achievement and great spiritual ministration, was consigned with appropriate ceremonies to the sacred waters of the Triveni, at the confluence of the Ganga and the Jamuna in the presence of a large number of monks and devotees. TEACHINGS OF SWAMI VIJNANANANDA

One should not ask for anything from God, but remain satisfied with whatever He is pleased to give. If you ask God for anything, He will give you a gift which is like a double-edged sword. Real welfare lies in using things properly; wrong use of things brings misfortune. The most remarkable phenomenon is that all men, all animals desire to live forever. This shows the immortality of all created things. Yes, it is really so. The one that is within us is without beginning and without end, without birth or death. There is nothing like death there. You are the complete master of your mind, and you can shape it as you like. When the mind is completely under your control, it will have nothing to exist on, except noble thoughts, just as we know that pure and wholesome food is necessary for our physical existence - impure and contaminated food will only injure the body - so it is necessary to nourish


the mind with noble thoughts and high ideals, refusing to provide it with evil thoughts and bad associations, which are like poison to the mind. You are the master of your mind, and you have to keep it pure. Your responsibility ends there, the rest is God’s business. He is Providence, the wish-fulfilling tree, who provides everything. He acts like a valet to provide us with whatever we want. Is He to blame, or are we? It is desire that is the root of all evil, and no one else is at fault. What you require is hope, faith, and patience, and gradually, you will reach the goal. Only a prolonged look at Him will wash away all the sins and sorrows of your heart. He is all-pervading, He is within you all, and He knows everything. Confide in Him, but you must be careful not to go to Him with selfish desires. The mind is full of perversity; and so long as it does not get a severe jolt, it does not properly knock at God’s door. It turns to God only when it gets a serious knock. What the Westerners call fate or destiny, we characterize as the result of our actions in previous births. The river of time is flowing on. Will it only do to be drifting with the current? You have got to cross the river, and you can get across only when you swim with the help of that current. Never give way to despair and dejection. Without perseverance nothing great can be achieved. The aim of like is to realize God and the task is not easy. You must steer clear of laziness and insincerity. Even when you are nearly across, you have to persist in your efforts and go on swimming, or else you will be sucked in by the currents and get drowned. If you put your whole heart into it, God will give you immense, infinite strength, and you will reach dry land. What is true of personal life is also true of a nation. Whatever situation one may be in, one can, to some degree, serve the motherland, serve the common people, and above all serve God. Always have the good of the universe at heart and let this become a part of your daily prayer. Don’t find fault with others. Rather look at your own faults. Once, while I was at Belur, a gentleman came and expressed his regret that we had not married and had renounced the world. By all sorts of arguments, he


demonstrated that our supreme guru (Shiva) was also married. Owing to ignorance, man tries to support his views with numerous intellectual arguments, and the result is philosophizing. But he gets over all these, once he is blessed with true insight. The Master used to say, ‘The world is a bad place, and you should renounce it.’ There was no argument behind it, because he knew that on one can get over his unhappiness without renouncing the world. Once it is realized that a thing is bad, the best thing is to discard it, there is no question of arguing about it. One reason for the decadence of our country is that, in the name of religion, people put forward harmful theories, as a result of which, people lose their faith in religion itself. Simplicity, faithfulness, and purity of heart are called for. Jesus Christ had no weapons to fight with the suffered crucifixion for the sake of truth. We also have to do likewise, and then only will rise again the sun of India’s glory. The very first attribute of God is lordliness. Contemplation on Him should enable us to gain lordliness over our passions and become masters of our souls. Secondly, whatever God wills is immediately done. We also have the power to translate our wishes into action. Thirdly, God is love. As He loves everyone, so should we love all created beings. One is invoking God’s name properly, to the extent that one is able to acquire His attributes. Selfishness has got the whole nation in its grip. But, again, without the pursuit of self-interest, the world would be at a standstill. Self-interest, however, should not be conceived in narrow and limited terms. Living for the little self is but death. But he who sacrifices his life for the good of the many is living truly. You have read in the Gita that God incarnates Himself when virtue declines and vice prevail. The significance of this verse is that, whenever our universal outlook becomes narrow and mind becomes cramped in this narrowness, and liberal ideas - ideas connected with the infinite appear once again. Your goodwill should flow out for the whole world. One has to have the spirit of renunciation, excluding petty selfishness. You should broaden your outlook and see the Universal Father in all created things.


One who can detach his mind from material things will see the light of God and His presence in everything. Worldly attachment draws people away from God and scorches them in the wild fire of the world.


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